THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'CAGE FWE _- _: Detroit, Cleveland Split; Cards Take Two from Cubs U Yanks Win, Tie at D.C.; A's-Bosox Tilts Cancelled W-, CHICAGO-(A)-The first place Detroit Tigers used -two scoring spurts, a four-run first and a six- run fifth, to beat the Chicago White Sox in a 10-9 second game slugfest yesterday. Lefty Bill Wight won a 4-1 duel from Hal White in the opener before 35,- 998 persons. The split cut Detroit's first place lead in the American League standings to four games because New York won and tied in a double-header in Washington. ROOKIE SAUL ROGOVIN end- ed up with his first major league victory in the second game. He checked the White Sox on three hits during the last four and one- third innings. One of the Chicago hits off Rogovin was Eddie Robinson's no. 6 home run. It gave the White Sox two runs in the eighth behind a walk to Mike McCormick. This swat lifted the score to its eventual windup. Detroit clubbed starter Bob Cain for a 4-0 lead in the first inning when Hoot Evers doubled for two runs behind a leadoff walk to Johnny Lipon and Jerry Prid- dy's double. Johnny Groth greeted Howie Judson for a triple to com- plete the spurt when the right 'ander took over for the routed ain. * * * DETROIT jumped on rookie Charley Cuellar for all of its six runs in the fat fifth. Priddy's in- field out scored Hal Newhouser with what proved to be the win- Prof Now Champ SAGINAW, Mich. - Robert Dixon, 32-year-old assistant professor at the Univer- sity, yesterday won the men's singles championship in the Michigan -State Closed Tennis Tournament. Dixon and Dick Lincoln, 1950 University graduate, won the men's doubles from Roger Cessna and Dick Shingleton of Lansing, 6-0, 2-6, 6-4. Dixon, in recapturing the singles title that he had won in 1946 and 1947, stroked his way past Lincoln, 7-5, 6-0. Both are lefthanders. ning run. Newhouser was chased in the home half of the same in- ning for his fourth straight failure to finish a starting assignment. In chasing Newhouser and reliefer Dizzy Trout the White Sox scored four runs in their turn. They had the bases full when Rogovin got big Gus Zer- nial on an inning-ending foul tip to catcher Aaron Robinson. Chicago gained a 14-8 hitting edge in the see-saw second game. Ken Holcombe, fifth White Sox pitcher, skipped through the final four innings without allowing a hit or a walk. DETROIT scored its only run off Wight in the opener in the first inning when Lipon led off with a single, stole second and counted on George Kell's safety. Nelson Fox launched Chicago's tying and winning rallies with singles. Fox' first hit opened the White Sox sixth, and the little second sacker completed the jour- ney on Dave Philley's sacrifice and Marvin Rickert's double. Fox' second single started a MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE three run eighth. Zernial, Eddie Robinson and catcher Phil Masi took turns batting in a run apiece. * * * INDIANS 8-3, BROWNS 7-8 CLEVELAND - (A') - Those "weak" St. Louis Browns put an- other chill on Cleveland's pennant' ambitions yesterday, whacking three Indian pitchers for 14 hits and winning the second game of a doubleheader, 8 to 3. Cleveland won the first game, 8 to 7, but the series went to the Browns, two games to one. The Indians had won their last seven series. * * * IN THAT SECOND GAME, the last place, relaxed Brownies show- ed a decided lack of respect for starting pitcher Mike Garcia, who had won and completed his last five games. Don Lenhardt slammed a home run in the fifth inning, scoring three, and Les Moss fol- lowed him to the plate and hit another homer. I Allie Clark hit a bases-empty homer off winning pitcher Don Johnson for Cleveland in the sixth inning. Al Widmar finished up for Johnson and shut out the In- dians in 3 1/3 innings. YANKEES 16-3, SENATORS 9-3 WASHINGTON -(P) -The New York Yankees won the first game of a doubleheader from the Wash-. ington Senators yesterday, 16-9, but had to be satisfied with a 3-3 tie in the nightcap which was called at the end of the ninth be-1 cause of darkness. The crowd of 25,229 saw a slug- fest in the opener, which required three hours and 24 minutes of playing time, and a tight pitching duel between southpaws Ed Lopat and Bob Kuzava in the nightcap. Sloppy fielding support hindered the efforts of both left handers. JOE DIMAGGIO was back at his familiar center field position for the Yankees in both games, with Johnny Mize installed at first base. Vic Raschi won his 10th vic- tory in the opener, though kay- oed in the eighth. Joe Page, his successor, also was mauled. Tom Ferrick finally quieted the Nats. Mize swatted a pair of singles in each game. In the opener he drove in two runs. THE YANKS assaulted five Nat hurlers for 17 hits in the first game. Sid Hudson, knocked out in the seventh, was the loser. The tall right hander and his successor, Mickey Harris, yielded five runs in that frame as New York wiped out a 5-4 deficit. BOSTON - (P) - A scheduled doubleheader between the Athle- tics and the Red Sox was post- poned yesterday because of rain. Patty, SeixasJ Gain Finals Sedgman, Drobny Win at Wimbledont WIMBLEDON-- (A) -Chancesl of an All-American men's final in the All-England Lawn Tennis Championships vanished on the center court at Wimbledon yes- terday. But on the neighboring No. 11 court the U.S. made certain that it will have one man in the last two for the fifth straight year. * * * TOP-SEEDED Frank Sedgman of Australia fought back from1 what looked to be certain defeat1 to whip Art Larsen of San Lean-' dro, Calif., in the most thrilling five set struggle the hallowed center court has seen in many a year, 8-10, 5-7, 7-5, 6-3, 7-5. Then Jaroslav Drobny of Egypt polished off Gardnar Mulloy of Miami, Fla., with ease, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. This fixed up tomorrow's up- per bracket semifinal-just as the tournament committee had expected--Sedgman vs. Drobny. * * * BUDGE PATTY, a native of+ California who isn't ranked in the United States because he spends most ofshis time in France, mopped up on Billy Tal- bert of New York, America's sec- ond ranking amateur, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-3. And Vic Seixas of Philadelphia, who was due to drop out a couple of days ago outlasted fourth-seeded Eric Sturgess of South Africa in five spine-ting- ling sets, 9-7, 6-8, 3-6, 6-2, 7-5. Charles Gets MedicalExam NEW YORK-(P)-NBA Heavy- weight Champion Ezzard Charles, sidelined for several months by a heart injury, will be examined today to determine his fitness for ring action. H e a r t specialists will give Charles a thorough check in the afternoon at Medical Center. If Ezzard passes, then he will be permitted to resume his boxing activities. If he fails, he probably will have to give up his title and take a long rest. CHARLES, who will be 29 on July 20, was examined May 4 in Chicago by the Illinois State Ath- letic Association Medical Board. If Charles' condition is found satisfactory, the NBA champion first will have to fulfill a contract to defend his crown against Fred- die Beshore of Harrisburg, Pa., in Buffalo, N. Y. ST. LOUIS-(A)-Two homeI Dodgers Divide Double; Phils,_Reds Share Bills runs by Stan Musial and effec- tive pitching by Max Lanier and Harry Brecheen gave the St. Louis Cardinals a pair of victories over the Chicago Cubs yesterday, 4to1and 4to3. Both of Musial's four-baggers followed a double - by Tommay Glaviano in the first game and by Red Schoendienst in the night- cap. * *.* BRECHEEN trailed briefly in the second contest as the Cubs scored on Wayne Terwilliger's triple and Bill Serena's single in the first inning. The visitors add- ed another in the second wnen Phil Cavarretta doubled, took third on a wild pitch and stole home. But in the third the Redbirds took the lead for keeps. Schoen- dienst doubled and Musial ho.. mered to open the frame. With just one out, Glenn Nelson siigl- ed Bill Howerton home from second but a doubleplay on Del Rice's grounder stopped the rally. Each club scored again, Cards in the seventh and Cubs in the ninth. * * * the the Dodgers' longest losing streak of the season - six games. * * * DON M U E L L E R'S two-run, pinch-hit single with two out cli- maxed a three-run Giant rally in the eighth inning of the first game, Duke Snider and Newcombe hit homers for the Dodgers. Al- vin Dark had one for the Giants. In the second game, the Dod- gers drove Dave Koslo from the box in the fifth inning with a three-run rally on two hits, a walk, a wild pitch, a hit bats- man and an infield out. One in- ning earlier Edwards broke a scoreless tie with his homer. Dark's second homer of the day, coming off Bud Podbielan, with two on in the fifth, accounted for all Giant runs. Palica, relieving Podbielan with one out in the in- ning, finished up and was credit- ed with the victory. He gave up only two hits in 4 2/3 innings. * * * PHILLIES 14-9, BRAVES 5-12 PHILADELPHIA - (P) - Sid Gordon's fourth grand slam. hom- er of the year provided the biggest baseball fireworks on the Fourth of July as the Boston Braves and Philadelphia Phillies split a double header. The Phils won the opener 14-5 for Robin Roberts' 10th win of the year. Then Gordon equalled a major league mark set 39 years ago by hitting his circuit clout in the ninth to enable the Braves to come from behind and win the nightcap 12 to 9. REDS 8-5, PIRATES 4-4 CINCINNATI - (P) - A time- ly single by Johnny Wyrostek in the ninth inning, after wholesale managerial juggling, enabled the Cincinnati Reds to take both ends of a double header with the Pitts- burgh Pirates, 8-4, 5-4, yesterday. Wyrostek's safety came with two men on, following Bobby Ad- ams' pinch-hit single, an error by Pittsburgh pitcher Bill MacDon- ald and a free ride to Danny Lit- whiler. It broke a 4-4 tie. With the win, the Reds scored a clean sweep of the three-game series. with the Bucs. They now have won 10 of their last 14 games. Motor Open To Mangrum Dapper Lloyd Comes From Behind to Win DETROIT-(A)-Dapper Lloyd Mangrum, who had to settle for a co-championship in the 1949 Mo- tor City Open, came from behind yesterday on the last nine holes to edge out Sammy Snead and win the 1950 tournament with a 274. The chain-smoking Mangrum was three strokes down to Snead going into the final nine and most of the gallery of 10,000 figured Snead, no. 1 money winner of pro golf this year, was going to pocket the $2,600 first prize mo- ney. * 4' * BUT MANGRUM rallied with a courageous back nine, racking up a pair of birdies in those final holes to finish with a 36-34-70. Then he had to sit by and watch Snead's vain efforts to edg:a the Chicagoan out. Snead had a 33 - three un- der par - going out, but two bogies on the final nine boosted him to a 38-71-275, one stroke behind Mangrum. Snead gave the gallery a :eal golfing thrill on the 18th on which he needed a birdie four for a tie. His second shot just missed a trap but he chipped up beautifully to within four feet of the pin. He flubbed that short putt, however, and had to settle for par and second money of $1,900. CAMPUS OPTICIANS Conveniently Located 222 Nickels Arcade Phone 2-9116 THE CUBS weren't able to bit Lanier in the first game until the seventh inning when Bob or- kowski singled. Cavarretta Killed Lanier's bid for a shut out in the eighth when he homered onto the right field pavilion roof. It was Lanier's eignth victory against two defeats and Bre- cheen's fifth triumph to four losses. DODGERS 5-5, GIANTS 4-3 NEW YORK-()-Bruce Ed- wards' home run with one aboard in the fourth inning andsplendid relief pitching by Erv Palica gave the Brooklyn Dodgers a 5-3 second game triumph over the New York Giants and a split of their holi- day doubleheader yesterday. The Giants knocked Don Newcombe out of the box with a three run rally in the eighth to win the opener, 5-4, before some 50,000 spectators. Brooklyn's victory snapped the I Read and Use The Michigan Daily Classifieds L a Fountain Pen Repairing Typewriter Sales and Service Typewriter Rentals Student Supplies Office Equipment Hobbies - Models 115 W. Liberty St. Phone 8950 ROYAL PORTABLE DEALERS I .for summllertime fun I 28 YEARS SERVICE TO MICHIGAN STUDENTS 3 _ New Low Price America's first twin lens cam- era priced to save you ONE- THIRD! Lates, flash-equip- ped model for perfect pic- tures indoors or outdoors. Lowest cost reflex camera with fine lens equipment. 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