&ATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY RAGE THREE Phillies Nip Slumping Dodgers Curious Fly Livens PGA Comipetiion Snead, Furgol Argue onRuling OAKMONT, Pa.-(A)--The de- fending champion, medalist and four former titlists were swept from the Professional Golfers As- sociation tournament yesterday, but these rocky incidents were completely over-shadowed by the case of the curious fly. The vagrant insect-variously described as a tiny butterfly or a gnat-figured in the stormy sec- ond round match between Sam Snead and Marty Furgol which was won by Snead with a birdie three on the 21st hole. THE MATCH, followed by a yelling throng of some 5,000, was finished about dusk after a series of huddles by the brains of the PGA. Furgol, 32-year-old Lemont, Il., professional, protested on the 14th green that Snead vio- lated a rule when he stooped down to blow an insect off his bal. Snead contended he didn't touch or clean the pellet and thus had broken no regulations. WHEN IT WAS impossible to get a ruling immediately, Furgol continued under protest and matched Snead stroke for stroke right up to the 18th where they finished all square. Later Furgol withdrew his protest and play continued. Snead won on the 21st hole. Snead thus was left one of the few giants remaining in the field of 16 after two full rounds of eliminations, from sunup to sun- downon the 6,882-yard, par 72 Oakmont course. OTHER favorites to prevail in- eluded Lloyd Mangrum of Niles, Ill., the leading money winner and top choice for the title; Jim Perrier, the sure-putting former Australian; huge Vi. Ghezzi of Inwood, N.Y., champion in 1941. Ferrier won the title in 1947. Nine extra hole matches were played during the long, dreary day with one of them eliminat- ing Chandler Harper of Ports- mouth, Va. The slender Virginian fretting with stomach and club-swinging troubles, was ushered to the side- lines by Jim Turnesa of Briarcliff, N.Y., who rallied to square the match on the 18th and then won it with a 25-foot, over-hill putt on the 23rd. Completely fatigued from his gruelling match, the swarthy Tur- nesa bowed in the second round to Charles Bassler of Catonsville, D., 5 and 4. N.I 1 11 it Major League Standings I AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago ..... New York .... Boston....... Cleveland.... Detroit ...... Washington .. Philadelphia . St. Lquis ..... w 43 42 39 35 31 25 26 19 L 23 23 27 30 31 39 41 46 Pct. .662 .646 .591 .554 .500 .390 .388 .292 GB M, 4 71K 10 171 17% ' 23 L Brooklyn .... New York .... St. Louis ..... Philadelphia. Cincinnati ... Boston ....... Chicago ..... Pittsburgh ... * w 4? 38 L 25 31 Pet. GB .621 .. .551 41f 33 32 35 33 32 33 30 34 28 33 25 39 * * .508 .500 .492 .469 .459 .391 8 81K 10 10! 15 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 2, Boston 1. Chicago 10, St. Louis 3. Cleveland 4, Detroit 1. Philadelphia 3-11, Washington 2-5. * * * TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Chicago-Starr (0-3) vs. Dobson (5-1). Boston at New York-Stobbs (5-3) vs. Kuzava (4-3). Detroit at Cleveland - Hutchinson (6-2) or Newhouser (5-5) vs. Wynn (5-9). Washington at Philadelphia--More- no (2-4) vs. Fowler (3-4). YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Philadelphia 3, Brooklyn 2. Chicago 6, St. Louis 6 (called, end of nine, because of train schedules). Boston at New York, postponed, rain. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati postponed (rain). * * * TODAY'S GAMES New York at Boston (Night) Jansen (8-6) vs. Bickford (8-7). Philadelphia at Brooklyn-Church (8-3) vs. Schmitz (1-3). Chicago at Cincinnati-Lown (1-4) vs. Fox (Earl). Pittsburgh at St. Louis (Night)- Dickson (9-6) vs. Chambers (3-8). Larsen, Sedgman, Sturgess Win in Wimbledon Matches WIMBLEDON, Eng.-tom)-Artful Art Larsen, the latest racquet wizard from California, continued yesterday to demonstrate to Wim- bledon fans how he won last year's American title as he turned back another good player with a minimum of effort to reach the quarter- final round of the All-England championships. The wiry little lefthander again kept complete control of the court in subduing Torsten Johannsson of Sweden's Davis Cup Team, 6-3, 7-5, 6-4. * * * * THREE OTHER international stars-Frank Sedgman and Ken McGregor of Australia and Eric Sturgess, the steady South African -accompanied the American champion into the round of eight. The remianing fourth round matches, three of them involving Americans, are scheduled to be played tomorrow. McGregor eliminated Paul Remy of France, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. Sedgman, No. 1 seeded, crushed Fausto Gardini, the young Ital- ian who Thursday upset Gardnar Mulloy of Miami. The one- sided scores were 6-0, 6-2, 6-1. Sturgess, who defeated Sedgman in last week's London champion- ships at Queen's Club, brushed aside Bernard Destremau of France, 6-2, 6-3, 6-2. In today matches, Herbie Flam of Beverly Hills meets Hans Van Swol of the Netherlands; Dick Savitt of Orange, N.J., tackles the veteran Josef Asboth of Hungary; Hamilton Richardson, the 17-year- old surprise package from Baton Rouge, plays Armando Vieria of Brazil, and Tony Mottram of England faces Lennart Bergelin of Sweden. JACKIE ROBINSON ... homers in vain Bucks'Duo In College Golf Finale COLUMBUS, O. - (P) - Ohio State's No. 1 and 2 golfers, Tom Nieporte andDon Johnson, yes- terday shot their way into the National Collegiate golf champ- ionship finals. Nieporte, OSU's No. 1 man, was deadly with his approach shots as he eliminated Buster Reed of North Texas State, two up. John- son, who was sworn into the Air Force in the morning, put out his semi - final opponent - Notre Dame's Tom Matey, 2 and 1. Nieporte and Johnson tee off in the 36-hole finals at ,8 a.m. (CST) today. Johnson, No. 2 on Ohio's golf squad, beat John Weaver of Rice, t he Southwestern Conference champion, one up in 20 holes in this morning's quarter-finals. In the upper bracket, his team- mate, Nieporte of Cincinnati, marched on into the semifinals with a 2 and 1 verdict over John Carson of the University of Geor- gia. In other quarterfinal contests, Buster Reed-of North TexasState toppled Wesley Ellis:of the Uni- versity of Texas, 2 and 1, and Tom Matey of Notre Dame chop- ped down John McCall of Colgate. Yanks Win; Indians ToP Tigers,_-1 Roberts' Hurling1 Gives Phils Win By The Associated Press BROOKLYN-Ralph Caballero's ninth-inning triple and a two- run homer by Del Wilber in the fifth gave Philadelphia a 3-2 win over Brooklyn tonight, clipping the Dodgers' lead to 42 games. Robin Roberts held the Brooks to five hits in hanging up his ninth victory. * * * BROOKLYN home runs, by Jackie Robinson and Duke Snider, were the only run-producing hits off Roberts. Joe DiMaggio's eighth inning double scored Phil Rizzuto with the winning run as the New York Yankees defeated the Bos- ton Red Sox, 2-1, behind Vie Raschi's three-hit itching. It was that righthanded ace's 12th win against four losses. The Yanks collected seven hits off lefty Maury McDermott and broke a 1-1 tie in the fifth when Hank Bauer lashed a two-bagger. All-Star Game Voting Closes CHICAGO - (P) - The total vote in the 1951 All-Star base- ball poll headed toward 4,000,- 00 today as the contest came to a rousing end at midnight. The Chicago White Sox, cur- rently leading the American League race, hold the lead at three infield positions in the latest tabulation. The leading White Sox players were Nelson Fox at second base, Chico Car- rasquel at short, and Eddie Robinson at first. Jackie Robinson, Dodger sec- ond baseman, continued to hold a wide lead over Al "Red" Schoendienst, St .Louis Card inals. Robinson has piled up 1,189,461 votes, thirdhhighest individual total in the poll. Stan Musial, also of the Card- inals, leads in the individual voting with 1,223,918, while the White Sox second baseman, Fox, is second with 1,204,558. into left field and countered on Gil McDougald's single. *G }*"0 TWO OF THE three Boston safeties against Raschi came in the fourth, which Johnny Pesky opened with a single to right. After Billy Goodman grounded out, Ted Williams singled in Pes- ky for the lone Boston counter. Bob Lemon pitched the Cleve- land Indians to a 4-1 win over Detroit despite an abscessed tooth and an upset stomach, The tooth was lanced and pack- ed earlier in the day, but his stom- ach became upset and he had to call time out in the sixth inning after Dick Kryhoski and Hoot Evers had singled and Aaron Rob- inson had walked, loading the bases. Lemon walked Charlie Keller after he returned to the mound, forcing in the Tigers' only score. After that he was never in ser- ious trouble in registering his eighth win against six losses. Home runs by Gus Zernial and Eddie Joost provided the Phila- delphia Athletics with a 3-2 twi: light victory over Washington in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader. Philadelphia won the second game, 11-5. The Chicago White Sox clung to their precious one half game lead in the American League by wal- loping the St. Louis Browns, 10-3, in the first of a four game series. The White Sox sent 18 batters to the plate in the first two inn- ings to score eight runs and rout pitchers Tommy Byrne and Jim- my Suchecki. The Chicago Cubs and the St. Louis Cardinals played to a 6-6 tie game, the contest being called at the end of nine innings to per- mit the Cubs to catch a train for Cincinnati. The game will be re- played at a date to be announced later. 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PENN STILL REBELLIOUS: Justice Department to Probe Grid TV Summer Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. IT*--E Last Times Today! Id1 I II! STARTS SUNDAY! EXOTING AS AN ARABIAN NIGII hADVENTURE! TONY CURTIS PIPR LAURIE and ith* 1 D AWING SLAVE GIR19 PHILADELPHIA--MP)-The Jus- tice Department yesterday told the University of Pennsylvania it has ordered a sweeping investiga- tion of televising college football games. At the same time, a department spokesman made it clear that the government has not approved the National Collegiate Athletic As- sociation plan of limiting foot- ball TV. THE FUNDAMENTAL issue is whether or not the NCAA pro- gram is legal or whether it vio- lates federal anti-trust laws. Francis T. Murray, Penn's athletic director, made public the text of a letter to him from H. G. Morison, Assistant Attor- ney General, in which Morison asserted that the Justice De- partment has not "either form- ally or informally approved the NCAA's television moratorium." It was the latest move in the long-simmering feud between Penn and the NCAA over the question of televising games next fall. THE NCAA at Dallas last Jan. 12 voted 161 to 7 to declare a moratorium on telecasts of col- lege football games, stating that it wanted to test the effect of TV on attendance and gate receipts. It announced it would permit only a limited number of games to be televised with 60 per cent of the NCAA's cent to tions. proceeds going TV fund and the competing .r.r--- -11 Late Shove TONIGHT 1 1 P. M. A E A ERY SPECIAc to the 40 per institu- Penn balked, declaring the NCAA position was illegal. The university announced it would defy the NCAA and telecast its eight home games despite the edict. The NCAA retaliated by de- claring Penn was "not in good standing" in the NCAA. MURRAY said he wrote Mor- son asking for the department's position. He made public Mori- son's reply in which the govern- ment official quoted a letter he sent on June 20 to Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., counsel for the NCAA. In Washington, Max Farrington of George Washington University said the exchange of correspon- dence will "have no effect" on the NCAA plans.' Farrington helped draw up the NCAA TV program. Farrington told a reporter "we have been proceeding on the grounds that we're legal until told otherwise. We've had no opinion from the Department of Justice because you don't get one until there's a case." The NCAA television committee is scheduled to meet in Chicago July 6 and 7 to discuss contracts. FROZEN CUSTARD Largest Root Beer in town in frosted mugs On Liberty-100 ft. from the theater. Liberty Custard Shop MICH lGAN DAILY Associated Press Wire News Sports, Campus & National Columnists, Campus & Syndicated Daily University Official Bulletin Complete Campus News Coverage ALFRED HITCHCOC K EVENTI! A HUNDRED AND ONE BREATHLESS MINUTES OF MATCHLESS SUSPENSE! iram ir Farley GRANGER Ruth ROMAN Robert WALKER 4 I 11 1.75 Available from Campus Salesmen L. G. 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