FRIDAY, AUGUST 3,1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE White, .900-1*4L& . r , ; i - r Vii' 7 Shutut )/U Ikees, 6-0 Barnum Has Sizzling 64 In Tan Golf Grand Rapids Pro Gets Back Nine 29 CHICAGO---(P)-Little-regarded John Barnum, hulking 220-pound pro of Grand Rapids, Mich., who never has broken into big time tournazent money, shot an eight- under-par 64 with a record crack- ing 29 on the last nine to take the first round lead today in Tam O'Shanter's $15,000 All-American golf jamboree. Texas-born Barnum, who turn- ed pro four years ago after a suc- cessful amateur career around Chicago, needed only 25 putts in fashioning his 35-29 card against Tam's 36-36-72 par for 6,915 yards. HE ONE-PUTTED every green but the 10th on the back nine in his fantastic windup which was a stroke better than Byron Nelson's record 30 set in 1945. Putts dropped from three to 20 feet for the 39-year-old, b foot 4 inch wibard as he grab- bed a three-stroke lead over gaudily-garbed Jimmy-. Demaret in the first lap towards top prize of $2,250. For four hours Demaret had led the money-hungry pack of 116 pros with his 34-33-67, only to relinquish it close to nightfall to Barnum, whose biggest victory since 1947 was winning the Michi- gan pro-amateur event several weeks ago. ' : # BARNUM DID much to bring the pro contingent to the front in the opening round. Frank Stranahah opened de- fence of his All-American ama- teur crown with a sizzling pair of 33's for 66 which looked as if is would put the play-for-pay boys to shame. The Toledo weightlfter stampeded to a six stroke lead over the simon-pure field of 31. . .i + ~f. Red Sox Take Two Ganes From Browns; Dodgers Win : - Major League Standings I AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE IRVIN SAFE ON TRIPLE-New York Giants' outfielder Monte Irvin slides safely into third base, scoring two men, in third inning against the Cubs in Chicago. Ransom Jackson, Cubs' third base- man, attempts as Giants Manager Leo Durocher signals for a slide. Irvin hit a line drive to center field. NO MORE WALTZING: Joe in Odd Role Now that de's Champ By WHITNEY MARTIN NEW YORK--(A)-There was a time when an announcement by Jersey Joe Walcott that he could- n't fight for a year would have been greeted with rousing cheers, with the fans asking what they had done to deserve such a break. That was when Jersey Joe Wal- cott was just another fighter, tak- ing bouts wherever he could get them, and turning in some per- formances which threatened to set back the art of fisticuffs 40 years, or at least to the date of his birth. HE WAS a clutch, grab, hit and run performer who carried cau- tion into the ring with him so he himself wouldn't be carried out. Then came the third Charles fight, and the unveiling of a new Walcott. The erstwhile lamb suddenly had become a li- ple. Good or bad, a heavyweight on. He carried the fight to champion still is the flag-bearer Charles, and was giving him a of the fight game. thorough beating when that crunching left hook came out IT HAS BEEN decided that Jer- of nowhere to send the cham- sey Joe will not meet Charles in a pion slumping to the canvas in return bout this year. We under- an inert heap. stood there was a return-bout So now Jersey Joe is champion, clause in the contract, a 90-day and whereas before the question provision or something like that. of when and how often he would Apparently such provisions are fight concerned primarily himself written in through habit, and are and the wife and kiddies, it now no more significant than a hole concerns a great number of peo- in a doughnut. ieating 0Advocatesoft Policy Toward Bao-ballt in Hearings By The Associated Press NEW YORK-(/P)-A brilliant relief pitching effort by Bob Cain preserved a shutout for the De- troit Tigers and starter Hal White yesterday as the Bengals defeated the New York Yankees, 6-0. The loss cut the Yanks' first- place edge over Boston's Red Sox and Cleveland's Indians. THE BLANKING was New York's third of the season, Cain and Early Wynn, Cleveland right- hander, previously having held the champions scoreless. Detroit led 2-0, when Cain entered the game with the bases full in the seventh, none out and a two balls and no strike count on pinch-hit- ter Johnny Hopp. Cain then struck out Hopp and fanned both Billy Martin and Gene Woodling to retire the side. The slim lefthander retired the side in order in the final pair of innings, whiffing two more in the process. The Boston Red Sox regained some of their lost ground in the American League's blistering pennant race with a 12-3 and 11-6 doubleheader sweep over the lowly but aroused St. Louis Browns. R ay Scarborough kept the Brownies' eight hits well scattered during -the opener. But they be- came savage in the seventh inning while scoring all of their night- cap's runs. * *, * THE POWER-PACKED Brook- lyn Dodgers went on another hit- ting spree and walloped the Pitts- burgh Pirates 10-5. Philadelphia unloaded on Herman Wehmeier and Ken Raffensberger in the eighth inn- ingsto defeat the Cincinnatij Reds, 7 to 5. Wehmeier, who has won only one game this season, turned back repeated threats until the eighth, holding out a 5-1 lead. Then he walked the first two batters and Granny Hamner filled the sacks with a single. BIG BOB RUSH checked the New York Giants with four hits as the Chicago Cubs pounded out a 6 to 3 triumph before 7,966. The victory gave the Cubs an edge of three games to two in the series and dropped the sec- ond place New Yorkers ten full games behind the Brooklyn Dodgers. Posting his first triumph since June 19, Rush stopped the Giants without a hit from the start of the third until Monte Irvin opened the ninth with a triple. FLEET JIM BUSBY, inserted in the lineup in the eighth inning as a defensive measure, cracked his fourth home run of the season in the tenth inning to give the re- bounding Chicago White Sox a 4 to 3 victory over the Philadel- phia Athletics. Big Gus Zernial smashed his 24th homer of the campaign off winner Randy Gumpert in the fifth for the A's. Steve Gromek's four-hit pitch- ing and long range blows by Larry Doby and Luke Easter gave Cleve- land a 5-2 victory over Washing- ton. The win moved the Indians into a second place tie with Bos- ton only one game back of New York. The contest between the Boston Braves and the St. Louis Cardinals was called last night in the last of the ninth with the Braves lead- ing 7-3 to permit the Braves to catch a train for Chicago. The game will be played out later in the season. Bob Elliott had driven in four runs with two homers and a single. Sid Gordon and Sam Jethroe also homered for Boston. New York .. Boston ...... Cleveland ... Chicago,.... Detroit ...... Washington . Philadelphia St. Louis .... W 60 60 60 56 45 44 39 31 L 37 39 39 45 51 55 62 67 Pct. .619 .606 .606 .554 .469 .444 .386 .316 GB 1 6 14!4 17 23 29 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 6, New York 0. Boston 12-11, St.Louis 1-6. Chicago 4, Philadelphia 3 (10 in- nings). Cleveland 5, Washington 2. * * * TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at New York (2)-Bryne (3-4) and McDonald (0-1) vs. Raschi (15-6) and Weisler (0-0). Chicago at Washington (N)-Rogo- vin (6-6) vs. Hudson (3-6). Cleveland at Philadelphia (N)- Garcia (13-7) vs. Zoldak (3-5). Detroit at Boston (N)--Trout (5-11) vs. McDermott (6-5). YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Brooklyn 10, Pittsburgh 5. Chicago 6, New York 3. Philadelphia 7, Cincinnati 5. Boston 7,C incinnati 5. Boston 7, St. Louis 3 (game iiicom- plete). TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Pittsburgh (N)- Roberts (13-8) vs. Law (3-6). Brooklyn at Cincinnati (N)-RO4 (15-2) vs. Blackwell (9-10). New York at St. Louis (N)-Maglie (15-4) vs. Brecheen (6-2). Boston at Chicago-Bickford (11-8) vs. Minner (4-10). Brooklyn ....« New York ... Philadelphia St. Louis .... Boston ...... Cincinnati .. Chicago ..... Pittsburgh .. 1 W 64 57 50 46 46 45 41 40 L 33 46 50 49 49 5z 52 58 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 Sunday Issue. FOR SALE RCA Automatic record changer, 78 rpm, $10. Call evenings 3-4701. )174 AUGUST SPECIALS for students and no nstudents Time............. ...$3.57 (44 wks.) Life.............$7.27 (70 wks.) Redbook......... $2.50 ($3 in Sept.) McCalls .......$2.50 ($3 in Sept.) Am. Home... ........$2.00 (13 mos.) U.S. News & World Report......$3.27 (44 wks.) Student Periodical Agency, 2-8242 )173 D-FROSTO-MATIC ICE BOX DEFROS- TERS-Originally $12.95. Now $4.00. Brand new, guaranteed. )172 MOTORCYCLE WINDSHIELDS-1 win- ter, 1 summer--$12. Phone 2-1014. )171 PRICES ROLLED BACK Men's Seersucker Pants $2.00 Navy "T" Shirts 39c Short Sleeve Sport Shirts $1.49 Rayon Swim Trunks $1.66 Open 'til 6 P.M. SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington )170 FOR SALE TROPICAL FISH - Aquatic plants, aquarium supplies. Sure there's a place in Ann Arbor. Call 3-0224. )169 PARAKEETS, Canaries, and Finches-- New and used cages. 562 So. Seventh, Phone 5330. )164 FOR RENT WOMAN graduate student wanted to share apartment. Call 3-4073 after 6 p.m.) )40F 3-BEDROOM HOME-Completely fur- nished, Aug. 18 to Sept. 18 while own- ers are on vacation. Located between campus and 'U' Hospital. Call 2-6654. ROOMS FOR RENT FOR MEN-Spacious, double, in beau- tiful home. Shown before noon or after 4 P.M., 1430 Cambridge. )84R SHARE APARTMENT with Grad Stu- dent. Save on meals. $8 week. Big yard, continuous hot water. Call 31791. )80R MISCELLANEOUS AT LIBERTY-Gernan 21 and 12 in- structor does tutoring and translation. A. R. Neumann, 2-7909. )14M ROOM AND BOARD BOARD AT FRATERNITY HOUSE - Short block from Law Quad, corner Hill and Oakland. Eating schedule at your convenience. Really good food. Ph. 2-1634. )3X PERSONAL PLEASE-Phone our office (2-8242 be- fore ordering or renewing any maga- zine. We can probably save you $ $ $ $, time and trouble. Student Periodical Agency, 330 Municipal Ct. Bldg. )65P BUSINESS SERVICES 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. TYPING WANTED-To do in my home. Experienced. Ph. 7590. 830 S. Main. )408 HELP WANTED MOTHER'S HELPER in home until Pall Term in exchange for room and board. Phone 3-8454. )62H STORE CLERK for Saturdays for Men's Furnishing and Shoe Store. Prefer ex- perienced man. Apply Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington St. )60H TRANSPORTATION COLORED WOMAN leaving for Phila- delphia in new Plymouth about Aug. 5. Would like companion. Call 2-0779 for information. )39T WANTED'TO BUY WOMAN'S AND MANp ENG. BIKE. Call 3-1511, ext. 2176 or 2-8732. )18x Pct. .660 .553 .500 .484 .484 .464 .441 .408 GB 10 15% 17 17 18 21 24 SOWENS WSomething for a coot U Dsummer evening? (I U A beautiful wool Mexican rebozo (Stole to you) in lovely colors at $10.50. You will find yourself wearing this the year( round. It isso useful and beautiful. 500 East Liberty Phone 3-8781 No waiting or worrying over parking . ~BEER WINE " SOFT DRINKS KEG BEER Open Daily 10 A.M., Sunday, Noon to 7 P.M. WASHINGTON - () - Rep. Keating (R-N.Y.) said yesterday that "Congress had better be darned careful before it starts tampering with baseball." Keating is a member of a judi- ciary subcommittee studying whe- ther baseball violates anti-trust laws. T HE COMMITTEE had an op- en date yesterday. But it goes back into action today with George Trautman, boss of the minors, again on the stand. Trautman will finish reading a 31-page statement he started Wednesday. Some committee members, 4 notably Chairman Celler (D- N.Y.), h a v e suggested that baseball needs a rather com- plete overhauling. Celler sug- gested that the future may bring four major leagues, and said baseball should start right now reorienting its thinking. Keating told a reporter that he takes a different view. "I have been impressed with how complicated baseball is," he said. "And I've also been im- pressed by the testimony of the men who have studied the game for years. "We can't possibly become ex- perts on baseball in a week or a month. I think we will have to pay a lot of attention to what they have to say." What they have to say, so far, adds up to about this: "If you don't want to destroy baseball, you had better leave it pretty much alone." Keating said he doesn't think the committee had any business looking into baseball in the first place. "At a time when the world is on fire it seems to me that we have more important things to do," he said. "I still think so." Today and Tomorrow OH SUZANNAH in color ROD CAMERON QUICK SAND MICKEY ROONEY ( T" -6 "Be gone, you cur, sir!!" screams the heroine In the Department of Speech Production "THE STREETS OF NEW YORK" DION BOUCICAULT'S MELODRAMA TONIGHT and SATURDAY, Aug. 3-4, at 8 P.M. Tickets: $1.20-90c-60c (Tax Incl.) Box Office Open Daily 10 A.M.-8 P.M. }Q LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Plenty of Hot Weather Ahead .. and the t STARTS SATURDAY s 1 x ®4 s;,; ' I , .?... TO 6:30 P.M. Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. E I I Late Show Sat. Nite Come as Late as 11 P.M. J S tgether lovin'est musical in I Today & Saturday FOR TH FI TIiME IN I 100-YEAR HISTORY THE CAMERA GOES -INSIDETHEWALLS OF PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. S ARNG STEVE DAVID COCH RAW"BR IAN 0~ PHILIP CAREY-TED de CORSIA- DOROTHY HART COMING SUNDAY! JEANNE CRAIN has C-O-O-L Dresses for those H-O-T DAYS at August Clearance Prices a moon! II II I n r - .- . I e ~ * ~ r rP~d Group of DRESSES Cottons, Sheers, Voiles, Chambrays, Tissue Ging- hams . . . I piece and sunbacks with jackets .. . also Rayon Sheers and Bembergs. Sizes 10-44, 121 to 24 , 9 to 15. Groups of SLIPS and PETTICOATS Cotton and Rayons . Lace Trimmed. 1.98 2.98 3.98 originally to 6.00 N I 7.00 10.00 13.00 11 r H Nll I I I i *T& n r I ... _ i.. 0 C1C* :_ -)C nn I