F .I It AY ta x; 195~. 7 THE MICHIGAN- AILY ....... . .... .. NL Race Tight Again as Giants Crush Cards, 13-3 No-Hit Game Rod rnv Rflont DIrni in 1 Ilk6A . r.> Major League Standings Highlights I=M Softball The no-hit pitching of the Chemists' Bill McKeachie topped a list of stellar performances by I-M softball pitchers yesterday as regular season play neared itsI close. - I Mc K E A C H I E'S performance gave the Chemists a 2-0 win from the Pickups. An error and a base on balls kept McKeachie from a perfect game. Meanwhile, Ed's Boys rolled to a 7-0 victory over Cooley House behind the 13-strike-out pitching of Jim Murphy, while Fletcher's Earl Haight whiffed 10 Tyler House men as his team racked up a 6-1 win. In other games, Strauss lam- basted Anderson, 19-2; Lutheran Chapel whipped the Architects, 11 to 4; and the Hardrocks socked the Goldbricks, 3-0. SOFTBALL GAMES postponed because of rain this week will be played the first two days of next week, league officials announced. I -AL , % / F(5 N A,./ X iW%-l L W -/o N0, A -P W5/W95 / N- L -ALN.9/5' N9/ XJV'~. AMERICAN Blind Golfer Defends Title In Nationals AUGUSTA, Me. - (P) - Charles Boswell, Birmingham, Ala., sales- man who lost his sight in the Bat- tle of the Bulge, successfully de- fended his National Blind Golf Tournament crown today. His winning total over the troublesome, par 71 Augusta coun- try club course was 220 for the 36 hole medal play two-day event. ART SMITH of Philadelphia, first day leader, bucketed a nine foot putt to finish in a second place deadlock with Bill Gilman of Portland, Maine's lone entrant. Each had 227. Boswell, former University of Alabama football great, parred the first two holes of today's 18-hole round. He carded. a bo- gey five on the third to take a two stroke lead. ZOLDAK WINS OWN GAME: Indians Sweep Series Tigers Still 212 Games Detroit New York Cleveland Boston Washington Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia W 55 53 52 48 39 36 30 29 LEAGUE L Pct. 29 .655 32 .624 35 .598 39 .552 44 .470 51 .414 55 .353 57 .337 GB 2% 4 8 V 15% 201/ 25%/ 27 NATIONAL] W St. Louis 48 Boston 46 Philadelphia 47 Brooklyn 43 Chicago 38 New York 37 Cincinnati 36 Pittsburgh 31 LEAGUE L Pet. 35 .578 35 .568 36 .566 36 .544 41 .481 46 .446 46 .439 51 .378 GB 1 1 8 11 11? 16 With 3-2 Win over A 's Ahead of NY PHILADELPHIA - (A') - Sam Zoldak pitched and batted Cleve- land to win in four and one half games of the American League lead as the Indians scored a 3-2 eleven inning vitcory over Phil- Tennis Halted By Rain Again CHICAGO-(I)--Rain yesterday forced postponement of all match- es in the National Clay Court championships at suburban River Forrest Tennis Club. It was the third postponement in four days due to soaked condi- tion of the courts. adelphia sweep of last night for a clean the three-game series. i MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1DAY 2 GAYS 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 Saturdoy is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. FOR SALE 1 ROOMS FOR RENT MALE GRAD STUDENT wanted to share apt._Call 2-6881. )31F PLEASANT SINGLE ROOM for fall. Ph. 5728. )30F GIRL WANTED to share apartmentfor three. Call 2-8751 evenings. ) 29F 2 SINGLE ROOMS - Cooking privi- leges if desired. Summer or fall se- mester. Men preferred. 836 Brook- wood Place. )28F O > , LOST & FOUND THREE ROOM AND SCREEN PORCH- All modern trailer home. Hot water, gas stove, 1948 model. Located on lake. Priced reasonable. Phone Whit- more Lake 4104. )32 1937 DODGE BUS. COUPE. Perfect condition. Only thing wrong is up- holstery. $85. Ph. 3CH-6731. g 30 MOTORCYCLE-1948 Indian 74 Chief. Phone 21014. )31 HARLEY 125-Excellent condition, ex- tras. Must sell immediately. Leaving for California. Bargain. Call 2-3734. )27 1948 HARLEY DAVIDSON 61-Excellent condition. Reasonable. Verne Ken- beds, 548 S. State, 9400. )29 U.S. NAVY "T" SHIRTS-45c. Sanf. wash pants $2.99, seersuckers, strips, plaids. Short sleeve sport shirts $1.59, 2 for $3.00. Open 'til 6 p.m. Sams Store, 122 E. Washington. )55 1000 78rpm records in new condition. All makes, many unusual items, most- ly below 50% off list prices. Also a few LP's and 45's. 928 Forest, 3rd floor apt. Tel. 2-9185. )26 GOLF CLUBS-Joe Kirkwood matched set. 5 irons, 29woods. Never used. $29.95. Ph. 2-8692. )23 SABLE & WHITE COLLIE-A.K.C. reg- istered. Canaries and Parakeets. 562 S. Seventh at W. Madison, Ph. 5330. )2B WANTED TO RENT HOUSE FOR MEDICAL FRATERNITY- Full year occupancy. Preferably near Hospital. Call Dr. Jacobson 2-9460. )1iN Zoldak batted in the winningj run with a blooper to left, ad-! mitting Bob Kennedy who had doubled to right with two down. Kennedy had forced the game in- to overtime when he unloaded his eighth home run of the year with two away in Cleveland's half of the ninth. * * * ZOLDAK, taking over for start- er Steve Gromek, limited the A's to two hits over the last five in- nings. Both came in the tenth when Connie Mack's men lost a great chance to sew up the game. Pitcher Alex Kelner opened with a single but Eddie Joost's hard smash went straight to Al Rosen, who started a double play. Wally Moses followed with a hit and Joe Gordon bobbled Elmer Valo's grounder but Sam Chapman was- unable to bring a run home. Kennedy was Cleveland's whole show as he tallied all three runs. The A's scored first off Gromek in the fourth on Sam Chapman's 15th homer and counted again in the sixth on Valo's single and the second of Ferris Fain's two doubles. Jimn..Ferrier Leads in Golf At St._Paul ST. PAUL, Minn.-tom)-.A seven- under par 65 that flowed from his smoothly working putter gave Jim Ferrier, 35-year-old San Francisco professional, the lead at the end of the first day of play in the St. Paul $15,000 open golf tournament yesterday. One stroke behind Ferrier with a 66 was Skee Riegel, former apa- teur from Tulsa, Okla., playing his first year as a professional. TIED AT 67 were Henry Ran- som, St. Andgews, Ill., Bill Nary, Chino, Calif.; Skip Alexander, Knoxville, Tenn., and Ted Kroll, New Hartford, N.Y., Joe Coria, St. Paul, and Fred Hawkins, El Paso, Texas, had 68S. Baseball's BOSTON-(A')-Dom DiMaggio pulled the Boston Red Sox into a 6-5 victory over the top-place De- troit Tigers by doubling in Billy Goodman with an 11th inning win- ning run today in a breath-taking contest that was rained on most of the time. Boston's Walt Dropo dropped behind the Tigers' George Kell in the major leagues hitting compe- tition by one-thousandth of a point, .3526 to .3525. * * * BOTH OF those sluggers hit safely once in five tries, Dropo whacking his 24th homer against Art Houtteman in the fourth in- ning. In the previous inning, Kell, who has played 11 more games, banged a two-bagger against Walt Masterson. The Tigers did all of their scoring before Masterson was replaced by Chuck Stobbs with one out in the fourth. Before Stobbs came in to pitch in sensational fashion, Pat Mul- lin, a right field replacement for Vic Wertz, gave the Tigers their third and fourth runs by hitting an inside-the-park homer. IT WAS a sizzling drive to right field that bounced around long enough to permit Mullin to score in easy fashion after Kell had bashed his double. Mullin also drove in Johnny Lipon with the first Detroit run in the opening inning. Two singles which sandwich- ed Johnny Pesky's triple gave the Red Sox two runs in the fifth and Bobby Doerr's 13th homer cut the Tigers' lead to 5-4 in the eighth. Art Houtteman, who went the entire route, found himself dead- locked in the ninth when he walk- ed two batters and gave Junior Stephens a chance to single in his 56th run of the season. Stobbs, who faced only 19 bat- ters in six full innings, thanks to a double play, gave way to a pinch- hitter in the ninth and Ellis Kin- der gained credit for the over- time win. HOUTTEMAN was only one pitch away from victory in the regulation time. Art was tagged for 12 hits, in- cluding the two homers, but it was two bases on balls in the ninth: that proved his down- fall. One of them was turned into the winning run. The - Detroit righthander fan- ned pinch-hitter Tom Wright, then walked both Goodman and Pesky. DiMaggio forced Pesky, but with the count two strikes and one ball, Stephens singled to center to score Goodman with the tying run. The setback sends the Tigers to New York for a crucial three- game series with their pennant hopes hanging in the balance. SECOND-IN-A-ROW: Pirates Edge Phils, 10-8 In 8-Pitcher Slug fest LOST-On Friday, June 30 in Williams St. Laundromat-Gold ring with Chi- nese letters. Extremelynanxious to have it returned. Reward. Ph. Jose Bornn, Music School. . )2 COLLEGIATE HAIR STYLES Specializing in " crew cuts f " short cuts * personality styles -7 hair cutters - THE DASCOLA BARBERS -Liberty off State PERSONAL BLOOD DONORS NEEDED. University Hospital Blood Bank is accepting new registrations for professional Blood Donors limitedrto males ofnover 21 years of age. Report to the Blood Bank between 9 and 11 a.m., Mon. thru Friday, or call 2-2521, Ext. 225. 17p KIDDIE KARE-Reliable baby sitters. Ph. 3-1121. )10B LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 209 5. State Phone 8161 )iP PITTSBURGH-( ')-In a nip- and-tuck slugfest that lasted al- most three hours the Pittsburgh Pirates edged out the Philadelphia Phils 10-8 yesterday. The brawl worked out eight dif- ferent pitchers. . . . .: THE VICTORY was the second in a row by the cellar-dwelling Bucs over the Phils, a top con- tender for the National League pennant. Slugger Ralph Kiner added; to the Pirate achievement by swat- ting his 27th homer in the last of the eighth. A big four-run sixth inning was the clincher for the Bucs. Doubles Slo-Mo-Shun Qualifies at 87 D E T R O I T-( P)-Two more speedboats, including the world record holder Slo-Mo-Shun IV, qualified today for tomorrow's Gold Cup race on the Detroit Ri- ver. But with only three heats quali- fied in two days a terrific traffic jam appears in the making tomor- row and during a two-hour quali-, fying extension period Saturday morning., There were numerousysmall boats on, the River today and Slo-Mo-Shun IV apparently never really opened up. Divorce Makes No Diff toRiggs LOS ANGELES - (/P) - Tennis player Bobby Riggs said some nice things today about his estranged wife, Kay, who has asked $1,500 monthly child support and tem- porary alimony pending a divorce. Riggs, 32-year-old professional, testified that his earnings last year were $33,920 and hi sexpenses $26,191. Mrs. Riggs, who alleged cruelty, says Riggs is worth $100,- 000 and earns $50,000 to $60,000 a year. The couple has two children. "She's young, attractive, intel- ligent and likeable, and she can support herself," Riggs told do- mestic relations court. TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at New York (night) -Gray (10-3) vs. Raschi (11-6). St. Louis at Boston (night)- Dorish (4-8) vs. Dobson (10-8). Cleveland at Washington (night)-Garcia (6-5) vs. Hud- son (9-7). Chicago at Philadelphia (night)-Pierce (6-9) vs. Bris- sie (4-13). TODAY'S GAMES New York at St. Louis (night) --Hearn (1-1) or Kennedy (3-4) vs. Staley (8-7). Brooklyn at Cincinnati -- Roe (11-5) vs. Wehmeier (8-10). Boston at Chicago-Sain (12- 6) vs. Rush (9-10). Philadelphia at Pittsburgh (night) - Roberts (10-5) vs. Queen (3-7). by Stan Rojek and Kiner and sin- gles by Ted Beard, Gus Bell, Dan- ny Murtaugh and Dan O'Connell accounted for the tallies. NEITHER of the starting pitch- ers, Bob Miller for the Phils or Cliff Chambers for the Pirates, saw the end of the fifth inning. Chambers' downfall was caused by fat pitches given to Del Ennis, Granny Hamner and Dick Sisler that went for homers. Sisler's put the Phils ahead in the fifth and ended Chambers' tour of duty, who left in favor of Vernon Law. Law was relieved by Murry Dickson in the seventh. The Pirates got 16 hits off the quintet of Phil throwers - Bob Miller, Blix Donnelly, Jim Kon- stanty, Milo Candini, and Russ Meyer. The Phillies got 14. Beard and O'Connell each got three hits in the Pirate win. Charles Will. Fight Aug.15 BUFFALO, N. Y.-(P)-Ezzard Charles, the NBA heavyweight champion, will defend his title here Aug. 15 in a 15-round bout with Freddie Beshore, promoter Dewey Michaels of the Fairview Athletic Club said last night. Michaels said both fighters had agreed to the new date for the twice-postponed match. It will be the champion's first fight since recovering from a strained heart muscle which led to the postponements earlier this year of his fight with Beshore. Spring Lake Final To Be Held Today GRAND HAVEN-(P)-Rylma Strevel of Mt. Clemens will meet Barbara Canine of Kalamazoo in the finals of the 28th annual Spring Lake Women's Open Golf tournament this morning., The match, bringing together Miss Strevel, medalist in this year's tournament, and Miss Canine, a finalist in the recent state tourna- ment at Lansing, promises to be a close battle. Five Twin Killings A id NY Cause St. Louis Holds One-Game Lead ST. LOUIS-()-The New York Giants thrashed the league-lead- ing St. Louis Cardinals 13-3 here last night to gain revenge for two severe beatings the day before. Five double plays helped the cause of Dave Koslo, who got credit for the victory after allow- ing nine hits. Erv Dusak did a splendid relief job for the Cardin- als, holding the Giants scoreless in the last five innings by giving up' but three hits. ** * THE GIANTS collected 13 hits and all of their runs off starter Red Munger and relief hurlers Al Papai and Fred Martin. St. Louis managed to get men on base but they couldn't pro- duce. The combination of Henry Thompson, Eddie Stanky and Tookie Gilbert pulled three double plays. Stanky, Ain Dark and Gilbert accounted for two more. Everyone in the Giants' lineup, except Stanky, hit safely at least once. Day or Nite- No Difference Reds WinTwo CINCINNATI--(P)-The C i n- cinnati Reds bagged both ends of a twi-night doubleheader from the Brooklyn Dodgers last night, win- ning the first 3-1 on Ken Raffens- berger's effective hurling and the nightcap 6-2 with a four-run erup- tion in the seventh. Ted Kluszewski hit his 17th ho- mer in the opener. CINCINNATI now has won 21 of its last 29 games and has cap- turned five straight doublehead- ers. Young Chris Van Cuyk and Redleg veteran Ewell Blackwell engaged in a tight pitching duel in the tail-ender. The .Reds grabbed a one-run edge in the second but four straight singles with two out in the third put the Dodgers ahead 2-1. The Redlegs tied it up in the fifth on a walk and two singles. Van Cuyk was yanked in the seventh with two on and none out. Rookie Joe Landrum took over the passed Kluszewski. Then catcher Bruce Edward's two-run error split the deadlock. Landrum scooped up Bobby Usher's roller to the mound and threw to the plate. Edwards let the ball get past him and two runs charged across the plate as the ball rolled to the backstop. Joe Adcock singl- ed in the other two runs that in- ning. * * * BLACKWELL struck out nine and didn't issue a single walk, nor did Raffensberger in the open- er. A walk, two singles and Klus- zewski's long liner produced two runs in Cincinnati's half of the first. Brooklyn shaved the lead to 2-1 in the fifth on three singles., The hulking Kluszewski's homer into the right-field bleachers in the sixth ended scoring. y.4 .4 .4 .44 .4 .4 .4 .V44 4 1 PORTRAITS' and GROUP PHOTOGRAPHS- oalmer £tuck Phone 2-2072 208 Mich. Theatre Bldg. ".N a a aa t 'A A A A A. L A a 0. l BUSINESS SERVICES dOMW ' uiuur i ; , _ HILDEGARDE SHOPPE-109 E. Wash- ington. Custom Clothes and Altera- tions. ) 3B THE STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY is authorized to give special r'ates to students and faculty members for TIME, LIFE, FORTUNE, ARCHITEC- TURAL FORUM, etc. Ph. 2-8242. )2 WASHING-Finish work and ironing also. Rough dry and wet washing. Free pick up and delivery. Ph. 2-9020. )1B 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 Read Daily Classifieds FRATERNITY JEWELRYO SOUVENIRS - GIFTS TRADITIONAL MUGS DIAMONDS - WATCHES CUPS -, TROPHIES L. G. BALFOUR CO. 1319 S. University "Home of the a Official Michigan Ring" c SummerHours, ten till five;'O o closed Saturdays. IT E E 1 Robinson, Dod'rs; Kell, Tigers Dropo, Red Sox Musial, Cards; Doby, Indians Pafko, Cubs 294 346 312 299 286 264 62 69 62 57 64 54 Big Six By The Associated Press LEADING BATSMEN AB R H 104 122 110 104 98 88 L1 i THE BEST FOR LESS Today Thru Sunday Pet. .354 .353 .353 .348 .343 .333 JAMES STEWART "Destry Rides Again" PLANNING A PICNIC? On your way out of town, just turn into our convenient driveway. I 25c Friday, Saturday Matinees 35c Evenings & Sundays RANDOLPH SCOTT "When The Daltons Rode" KEG DRIVE THROUGH. * BEER * WINE * SOFT DR 114 E. Williams P Open daily 10 A.M.-10 P.M. Sundays noon to BEER E Jiol.hnjug coffee 4£AqOP 1204 South University serving BREAKFASTS, LUNCHEONS and DINNERS SANDWICHES and SALADS from 7:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. and 5:00 P.M. to 7 P.M. Closed Sundays I. r. s. fi ART CINEMA LEAGUE and THE CHESS CLUB present HENRY FONDA in "Young Mr. Lincoln" j INKS hone 7191 7 P.M. P I 1 Relax in Comfort! Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. Coo!E N O W Why mail your washing home when the LAUNDROMAT is easier ... give Mother a break. THE LAUNDROMAT IS COMPLETELY EQUIPPED TO HANDLE YOUR WASH DAY PROBLEMS - I IJktF( ENJOY The beauty of fine ORIENTAL t.m- 'I , 1 r" "t- ! °rlA ./ItF' I I Ii -i _ .. ._ U._._. I I 'LAU i