THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ' THREE mm Yanks Squeeze by Tribe, 2 1 * * * THIS IS MUSIC? Dodger Symr-phonyStirs Union's Ire By WHITNEY MARTIN NEW YORK-()-It's all right to call the Bums bums, but when you start calling the Brooklyn Dodger Sym-phony musicians mu- sicians, well, that's carrying things a little too far. These musical rinky-dinks are the center of a tempest in a tuba, created when Local 802 of the Mu- sician's Union threatened to picket1 Ebbet's Field unless an all-union' s. crew was hired to replace the semi- pros at a fee of $100 a day. * * * S NOW EBBETS FIELD, as you may have heard, is the home of the Dodgers, and strange happen- ings. Sights and sounds never seen nor heard anywhere else amaze and intrigue visitors. Not the least of these strange sights and sounds is provided by the Dodger Sym-phony, a group of alleged musicians togged out Veeck's City Series Plan Angers Cardinals' Saigh ST. LOUIS-(A')-Bill Veeck has touched off the fireworks for sure in St. Louis and the noise and smoke may last for a long time. Owner Fred Saigh of the Cardi- nals feels that one of Veeck's big- gest firecrackers was tossed in his direction. And he doesn't like it. , UNLIKE THE flamboyant show- man-owner of the Browns, Saigh is a quiet and studious man who offers baseball without the frills. But Saigh's calm demeanor was ruffled last Saturdaywhen Veeck challenged the Cardinals Fans To See Seven Football Games on TV NEW YORK-(P)-Football fans of .the television-watching variety were assured yesterday that they can see games on seven of ten big Saturdays next fall. The National Collegiate Athletic Association television committee, after a two-day session, named the Westinghouse Electric Corpor- ation of Pittsburgh as sponsor of a ten-weeks program of experi- mental "live" television. * * * IT WILL RUN from Sept. 22 through Nov. 24 and each geogra- phical region of the United States will be blacked out on three of the ten Saturdays. The "Army-Navy game on Dec. 1 will be televised as in the past. The games to be televised will be selected by the sponsor on the basis of a tentative schedule al- ready drawn up. Since Westing- house will negotiate with the in- dividual colleges for each game, no schedule was announced. Nei- ther was it decided which network or stations will carry the telecasts. to a post-season city series, with the proceeds to go to the Com- munity Chest. The explosive was cached in the third paragraph of the written challenge. It read: "Since it now appears that neither St. Louis team is go- ing to be engaged in the World Series this fall, it would seem that here is an opportunity for us to take part in this most important drive." * * * SAIGH DOESN'T like the way Veeck and his last-place Browns counted the third-place Redbirds out of the National League race. In a letter yesterday to the general chairman of the Com- munity Chest here, Saigh said the challenge was made to em- barass the Cardinals-"For if it was possible to play the games, Mr. Veeck, a newcomer to the city, would take full cre- dit, and if they were not played, the Cardinals would receive the full blame." Added Saigh: "Therefore it is natural to assume that the only thing Mr. Veeck has in mind is the amount of publicity' that would accrue first to him person- ally and second to the Browns." * * * ASSERTING THAT he feels the Cardinals (11 games off the pace) still have a chance for the pen- nant, Saigh declined Veeck's in- vitation. He recalled that on Aug. 9, 19- 42, the Cardinals were 10 games behind; on September 4, 1934, six games behind, and went on to win World Championships. L Saigh suggested instead that % Veeck give the Community Chest a check for $10,000 to be matched by a similar check from the Car- dinals. "From past history. $20,000 is considerably more than would be netted from any game or post- season series," the letter added. in keepink with their music. Loud, that is. These rabid fans for years have been adding to the festive atmos- phere of the park, filling the air with sounds which are a cross be- tween the triumphant trumpeting of a herd of bull elephants and the plaintive wails of a treed cat, de- pending on the progress of the games. "Let the Brooklyn Baseball Club hire and pay union men," a union official said, "and we guarantee to give Ebbets Field a band that can play lousier than the Dodger Sym-phony, if that's what they want." "We regard the Dodger Sym- phony as a group of fans merely expressing their joy at being alive and being Dodger rooters," Walter O'Malley, President of the Club, retorted. "True, we let them in free, but we don't pay them. Their form of expression is music-well, anyway, a noise from musical in- struments." * * * "WE DIDN'T mean nothing," Lou Soriano, co-founder of the Sym-phony 13 years ago, contri- buted in a small, injured voice. "We didn't want to hurt any un- ion men. All we've been doing is pep up Brooklyn games. We don't even get free hot dogs." The origin of the Sym-phony was quite as impromptu as the noises which emerge unexpect- edly from the various instru- ments. A bunch of fellows went to a picnic 13 years ago with their instruments. And were rained out. The weather cleared, so they went to Ebbets Field to a ball game and put on a show. That made them. The ball club isn't exactly idle during this controversy over who called the piccolo player a bum or who called the bum a piccolo play- er. It has designated Aug. 13 as musical appreciation night at Eb- betts Field, with the fans invited to bring their own musical instru- ments and play as they please. If developments warrant, there later will be an audition on the City Hall steps to determine if there is a worse band than the Sym-phony, a rather hopeless quest, some of the fans argue. Major League Standings JOHN MIZE ... hits in clutch Toledo Trio Took Bribes To .Rig Tilts Hogan Reveals Fixers Traveled with Braves NEW YORK-(P)-The explod- ing college basketball scandal en- gulfed its sixth school yesterday and turned up an amazing story of a "double cross" among gamb- lers involving a death threat to one of them. District Attorney Frank S. Ho- gan reported that three stars of the University of Toledo's crack team admitted taking money to rig the points in a game with Ni- agara at Toledo last December. * The District Attorny said the three Toledo players, William Walker of Toledo, Robert Mc- Donald of New York, and Carlo Muzi of Akron, told the grand jury how they kept their win- ning margin to only three points in beating Niagara, 73-70, in Toledo on Dec. 14, 1950. Hogan, in stressing the cooper- ation of the three players, made it clear there are no charges against them. There had been no law against bribing amateur ath- letes in Ohio, but starting Aug. 22 it will be punishable by a $10,- 000 fine or a prison sentence of one to five years, or both. IN RELATING the fantastic story of the "double cross" in the Bradley-St. Joseph's game at Phil- adelphia's Convention Hall early in 1950, Hogan said one of the alleged fixers travelled in the same Pullman berth with Melchi- orre. According to Hogan, Kaye and the Englisis brothers, Nicholas (Nick the Greek) and Tony, worked together to fix the Brad- ley players. Nick travelled with the Bradley team, said Hogan, who reported the following series of events: The battle of wits between the gamblers developed when Jack West, a convicted New York book- maker who is being sought by Ho- gan, got together with Nick Eng- lisis to get information on the Bradley-St. Joseph's game. * * * WEST, A onetime associate of the notorious racketeer Marty Krompier, was to pay Nick $1,000 for information on the Bradley score. This separate deal was un- known to Kaye. It turned out that Bradley won, 64-60. Thus, with a point spot of six or seven, those who got on St. Joseph's won their bets. , A few hours before the deal was made, the gambling books were flooded with wagers on St. -Jo- seph's and the prosecutor said that West evidently bet a lot of money. Kaye told Nick Englisis, accord- ing to Hogan, that "There must be a double-cross and we will have to switch our bets." Hogan said Kaye then instruct- ed the players to win over the spread, and, after they agreed, Nick again relayed this informa- tion to West. West and his associ- ates protested they had their bets down and couldn't switch, said Hogan, citing the story told by the Englisis brothers. Hogan said West and two asso- ciates then grabbed Tony Englisis and brought him to West's apart- ment in Brooklyn. "Tony thought he was going to get killed," said Hogan. Tony telephoned Convention Hall, had his brother paged, and told him his life was threatened, said Hogan. Mize Double Wins in 9th; Bosox Lose Senators, Coani Top Tigers, 7-4 By The Associated Press NEW YORK - The Cleveland Indians came within one out of winning their first game at the Yankee Stadium in over a year yesterday, but a two-out, ninth inning double by Johnny Mize scored two runs, wrecked the In- dians for the 13th straaight time here and gave the New York Yan- kees a thrilling 2-1 triumph. Mike Garcia, heavyweight In- dian righthander, had surrender- ed only four singles and was work- ing on his second straight shutout as the Yanks came up for the last time. The Tribe had manufactur- ed their lone run in the first in- ing on two hits and two outs off Eddie Lopat. GIL McDOUGALD, however, op- ened the last of the ninth with a line single to center. Garcia quick- ly disposed of the next two batters, striking out Gene Woodling and getting Joe DiMaggio on a fly to right. It looked like the finish. Larry Berra kept the Yankee hopes alive with a single to cen- ter that sent McDougald to third. Mize, whose eighth inning ho- mer beat Cleveland 3-2 Tuesday, worked the count to one and one, then sliced a hump-backed hit over third. Berra followed McDougald across the plate with the winning run. Easy throwing Ken Holcombe turned up as the Chicago White Sox's eagerly sought "stopper," and his artistic five-hit pitching stint provided a 6-2 victory over the Boston Red Sox. The effective righthander faced only 32 Bostonians while snapping his fourth-place club's five game losing streak. BUT HOLCOMBE owed much to Don Lenhardt, who belted his second three-run homer here in two days against Lefty Mel Par- nell in the sixth inning. A 14-hit attack by the Wash- ington Senators, highlighted by a triple and three singles by Gil Coan, blasted four Detroit Tiger pitchers for a 7-4 Washington victory. The Tigers hammered D o n Johnsoi for three runs in the first inning but he braced to post his sixth victory. Freddie Hutch- inson, smashed for two runs in the second inning and two more in the third, was charged with the defeat, his sixth against eight wins. THE FRONT-RUNNING Brook- lyn Dodgers pushed their latest winning streak to five games as Preacher Roe pitched his 14th vic- tory and 12th complete game in defeating the Chicago Cubs 6 to 2, before 17,889. Roe, the National League's winningest pitcher, g a v e up eight hits, but walked only one and fanned six, while his mates made the most of four Cub er- rors and seven hits off starter Bob Rush and his successor, Walt Dubiel. Catcher Joe Garagiola's eighth home run of the year with two aboard in the seventh inning help- ed the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 5 to 4 victory over the New York Gi- ants. George Strickland's long fly ball in the eighth with the bases load- ed scored Pete Reiser with the winning run. *. * 4' RIGHTHANDER Ned Garver chalked up his 13th victory in 18 decisions as the St. Louis Browns pushed over a tally in the ninth inning to take a 5 to 4 win over the Philadelphia Athletics. It was Garver's tenth consecutive win in three years over the A's. The winning counter resulted from rookie shortstop Bill Jen- nings' single, a sacrifice by Gar- ver, a hit by Bob Young and Jim Delsing's outfield fly. Garver has beaten Philadelphia three times this year. The loser was reliever Carl Scheib who suffered his eleventh setback. Del Wilber's home run, Granny Hamner's double and Robin Rob- erts' four-hit pitching were too much for the St. Louis Cardinals as the Philadelphia Phillies took a 2 to 0 decision from the Red- birds. MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 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 Sgnday Issue. FOR SALE 1940 BUICK SPECIAL 2-door sedan to highest bidder. 1004 Olivia after 3 p.m. Ph. 2-2443. )162 BARGAIN DAYS Men's Wear Seersucker Pants -..............$2.00 Rayon Dress Pants.............$2.00 Sandals .......................$2.00 White "Hankies" 9c ea.... doz. $1.00 Short Sleeve Sport Shirts ......$1.35 100% Wool Swim Trunks ..... $1.00 Brief Style Swim Trunks ......$1.66 Terry Cloth Sweaters, yellow, white............... $1.77 Hanes "T" Shirts, whites, colors. .89c 3 for $2.50 Other Items On Sale Not Advertised Open 'til 6 p.m. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )163 ROOMS FOR RENT CAMPUS Tourist Home. Rooms by Day or Week. Bath, Shower. Television. 518 E. William St. Phone 3-8454. )1R ROOMS FOR RENT SHARE APARTMENT with Grad Stu- dent. Save on meals. $8 week. Big yard, continuous hot water. Call 31791 )80R ROOM AND BOARD BOARD AT FRATERNITY HOUSE - Short block from Law Quad, corner Hillrand Oakland. Eating schedule at your convenience. Really good food. Ph. 2-1634. )3X MISCELLANEOUS I KNOW that I am I because I received my copy of Time today which I bought through the Student Periodical Agency at the special price of $3 a year by phoning 2-8242. )16M AT LIBERTY-German 11 and 12 in- structor does tutoring and translation. A. R. Neumann. 2-7909. )14M BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING DONE-Call A.A. 7365 between 8:30 and 5:00. )42B DOCTORAL CANDIDATE desires in- tensive tutoring in French translation during August-September. Wishes to contact tutoress with good background in French written language. Phone 2-4431, Room 219. n)41B TYPING WANT9D-To do in my home. Experienced. Ph. 7590. 830 S. Main. )40B WASHING, finished work, and hand ironing. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also ironing separately. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone 2-9020. We spe- cialize in doing summer dresses. HELP WANTED STORE CLERK for Saturdays for Men's Furnishing and Shoe Store. Prefer ex- perienced man. Apply Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington St. )60H WANTED BOOKKEEPER -- Be able to take a trial balance. Job open now. Apply in person. WOODS MANUFAC- TURING CO., 2175 Stadium Blvd. )59H PERSONAL BE SURE TO SEE the Obedience Exh- bition at the HURAN HILLS KENNEL CLUB'S DOG SHOW to be held all day Sunday at Yost Field House. 400 dogs from 11 states and Canada will be on display. )61P Read Daily Classifieds "Why can't he wait until we get to the beach?" U _______________ STARTING TODAY Thru Saturday r--a V I Continuous 4 Doily from 1 P.M. .. ... ...a 6:30 PAL STARTS TODAY: AVALANCHING FROM THETOP OF THE ADVENTURE WORLD! KIRK VIRGINIA JOHN WALTER DOUG LAS AMAYO -AGAR BRENNAN ARNER BROS. T AlONGti GEATDIVIDE Extra Added CSKY WORLD "PILGRIM SKIERS NEWS j POPE YE" SIES1EW AMERICAN W New York .... 55 Boston .... 55 Cleveland ...54 Chicago. 54 Detroit........40 Washington .. 41 Philadelphia . 36 St. Louis .... 28 LEAGUE L Pct. 34 .618 36 .604 37 .593 40 .574 47 .460 50 .451 57 .387 62 .311 GB 1' 2 3 14 15 21 27% TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at New York-Feller (14- 3) vs. Reynolds (11-5). Chicago at Boston-Dobson (6-3) vs. Nixon (6-2). Detroit at Washington-Gray (3-10) or Trucks (4-3) vs. Hudson (3-6). St. Louis at Philadelphia-(N)- Pillette (4-9) vs. Martin (6-1). YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 2, Cleveland 1. Chicago 6, Boston 2. Washington 7, Detroit 4. St. Louis 5, Philadelphia 4. (Only gam he ed). A* *U NATIONAL LEAGUE I "CITY OF BALL TOSSERS" "MUSICAL MEMORIES" GAY '90's Brooklyn .... New York .... St. Louis . Philadelphia Cincinnati ... Boston ....... Chicago. Pittsburgh . W 58 51 45 45 43 42 36 36 L 32 43 43 46 45 45 47 55 Pct. .644 .543 .511 .495 .489 .483 .434 .396 GB 9 12 1311 14 14% 18 %z c (Tax Incl.) NEWS -- CARTOON "ROMANTIC RIVIERA" TRAVEL I. Coming Sunday! STEPHAN McNALLY "APACHE DRUMS" o+wowswo a SALE CONTINUES Thru Friday and Saturday 30% Off on Unmatched Clubs 20% Off on Matched Sets, Accessories, Carts and Bags 20% Off on All Fishing Tackle 20% Off on all Baseball Equipment ... Bats, Shoes, and Gloves Also On Picnic Equipment YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Brooklyn 6, Chicago 2. Pittsburgh 5, New York 4. Philadelphia 2, St. Louis 0. TODAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at Chicago-Newcombe (13 -4) vs. Lown (2-5). Boston at Cincnnati--Bickford (10- 7) vs. Blackwell (9-0). Philadelphia at St. Louis (N)-Po- holsky (4-8) or Staley (12-9) vs. John- son (1-1) or Thompson(3-6). (Only games scheduled). I- A Limited Number Classical Records Ends Tonight SO YOUNG SO BAD Paul Henreid BELLE LE GRAND Vera Ralston John Carroll A Serving Quality Food a 9 U 1 II I I I I l I , ,1 IAn tcn ~ r"41c nD AKli"C f'\FAC nrTDA Al I l IKAC II