THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE I - - ° Reynol ds Hurls No-Hit Game IIF IE -'2' Major League Standings NY Star Blanks Tribe, 1-0; Red Sox Win First Game aid <.6- NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. Brooklyn .... 51 a 26 .662 St. Louis .. 41 35 ..539 New York... 3 37 .538 Cincinnati 36 38 .486 Philadelphia . 36 41 .468 Boston .......34 40 .459 Chicago 30 40 .429 Pittsburgh ... 31 45 .408 GB 9/ 92 133/ 15 153/ 17 19 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 2, New York 0. Cincinnati at Boston (Night) post- poned, rain. Philadelphia 11, Pittsburgh 4 (night). Brooklyn 9, Boston 3. TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Brooklyn-Lown (1-4) or Hiller (5-6) vs. Newcombe (12-4). St. Louis at New York-(Night)-- Munger (4-3) vs. Koslo (3-5). Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (Night- Pollet (2-5) vs. Church (9-4). Cincinnati at Boston (Night)- Raffensberger (8-9) vs. Sain (4-9) or Nichols (4-3). x . AMERICANl W Boston ...... 48 Chicago ...49 New York .... 46 Cleveland .... 44 Detroit ...... 35 Washington ..31 Philadelphia . 31 St. Louis .... 22 LEAGUE L Pet. 29 .628 30 .624 29 .618 33 .568 38 .479 45 .408 48 .389 54 .277 GB 1' 4 12 161/ 18 25 TURPIN TAKES TITLE-Randy Turpin (left), 23-year-old Eng- lishman, goes up on his toes in the sixth round as he pushes a left past the face of Sugar Ray Robinson in the July 10 fight in Lon- don in which Turpin upset the American to take the middleweight championship of the world. Robinson had held the title since Feb. 14, when he dethroned Jake LaMotta in their battle in Chi- cago. Runs Again Cheap Commodity In .Intramural Softball Games YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 3, Chicago 0, (first twi- night). Boston at Chicago (Second) incom- plete. New York 1, Cleveland 0. Detroit 5, Washington 4. Philadelphia 9, St. Louis 7 (first twi-night). Philadelphia 13, St. Louis 0 (second). TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Chicago (Night)-McDer- mott (5-5) vs. Pierce (9-6). Washington at Detroit (Night)-- Porterfield (1-2) vs. Gray (3-9). New York at Cleveland, (Night)-- Raschi (12-6) vs. Lemon (8-8). Philadelphia at St. Louis (Night)- Fowler (3-4) vs. Pillette (3-7). COLLEGIATE HAIR STYLES Specializing in * crew cuts f short cuts * personality styles 7 hair cutters - THE DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty off State High Scoring continued to be the order of the day in 1-M Soft- ball yesterday, as no less than 103 runs werescored in three of the six games played. In one of the highest scoring games recorded in I-M Softball history, Zeta Psi outlasted Acacia by, he fantastic score of 23-18, in a fraternity league tussle. IN RESIDENCE HALL run der- bies, Adams lambasted Lloyd, 26-7 and Fletcher won by the colossal total of 25-4 over Wenley. The best game of the day turned up in the Sigma Chi- Theta Delta Chi contest which Sigma Chi won, 3-1, behind the four hit pitching of Larry Gus- tafson. Don Isbey, Sigma Chi outfielder ended the game with a fine running catch of a long fly tagged home-run.I Hard hitting hampered by poor pitching appears to be the main feature of I-M softball this sum- mer as the hurlers seem unable I.Bulle tin CHICAGO-()-The Boston Red Sox and Chicago White Sox were tied at 4-4 going into the 16th inning of their second game of a Twi-Night double header last night. The Red Sox won the first game, 3 to 2, moving into first place by a few percentage points over the White Sox. By The Associated Press Allie Reynolds, 32-year-old New York righthander, pitched a no- hitter last night as the Yankees defeated the Cleveland Indians 1-0 on Gene Woodling's seventh- inning homer. Reynolds, who walked only three men, retired in order the last 17 men he faced. The only other Indian to reach first was Bob Avila who got there in the first frame when Phil Rizzuto fum- bled his grounder. *~ * * REYNOLDS' victory came in a tight hurling duel with Bob Feller, who gave up only four hits, two of them in the infield. Neither team made a hit until the sixth when Mickey Mantle, young New York outfielder, came through with a double. For Reynolds, who went to the Yanks from Cleveland four years ago, the win was his 10th against five defeats. It was the third time he has shut out the Indians this season. In 36 inn- ings Cleveland has been able to get only two runs off his offer- ings this year. Except for Mantle's double and Woodling's homer, the only other Yankee hits were Gil McDougald's single in the seventh and Yogi Berra's one-bagger in the last frame. * * * TWO OTHER no-hitters have been hurled in the majors this season. One was Feller's against Detroit here July 1. The other was by Cliff Chambers, who tossed it against the Boston Braves May 6 for the Pittsburgh Pirates. In a daylight affair Hoot Evers slammed his sixth homer of the season to give the Detroit Tigers a 5-4 win over the Wash- ington Senators-but the gen- erosity of two Washington pitch- ers provided two big Tiger runs. Starting pitcher Bob Cain re- corded his eighth win against six losses. He was aide dwhen Sena- tor pitchers Fred Sanford, the loser, and Mickey Harris, twice walked batters wit hthe bases loaded to force in runs. George Kell, Vic Wertz, and Evers with two hits each, paced the 10-hit blast against four Sen- ator hurlers. IN THE NATIONAL LEAGUE Roy Campanella blasted a three- run homer and Carl Furillo anti Billy, Cox connected for round- trippers with the bases empty last night to lead the Brooklyn Dodgers to a 9-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs. In another NL night game, Ed. Waitkus' and' Gran Mam- ner 's hitting and the steady hurling of Russ Meyer gave the Philadelphia Phillies an 11 to 6 victory over the Pittsburgh Pi- rates last night. Hamner hit his eighth home run of the season. Del Wilber of the Phils and Dave Bell of the Bucs also hit for the circuit. YESTERDAY AFTERNOON Gerry Staley blanked the New York Giants, 2-0, on four hits as the St. Louis Cardinals slip- ped past the losers into second place in the National League by one percentage point. Loser Larry Jansen gave up only three hits but one was a two-run homer by Billy John- son in the fifth inning. Any chance the Giants had against the righthanded slants of Staley were cut short by four St. Louis doubleplays.I Staley allowed only singles in winning his 12th game against eight losses. Jansen, replaced by Monte Kennedy in the ninth inn- ing, suffered his eighth setback against 11 wins. Baseball's BigSix By The Associated Press Leading Batsmen (Based on 200 or more at bats). 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. LOST AND FOUND LOST WALLET - Will party finding man's wallet in Harris Hall July 2 please mail the remains to Alexander Smith, 1106 Packard. No questions asked. The papers are vital. )101L FOR SALE ATT: A&D STUDENTS-The Magazine of Building (formerly Architectural Forum) is offered to you at $5.50 in- stead of $11 a year. Merely phone 28242, Student Periodical Agency. )155 2000 RECORDS (78 rpm), little used, at 25c per disc (no acoustics). Many rare and imported items, Glynde- bourne Mozart, Haydn Quartet Soc., Schweitzer's & Landowska's Bach, Rubinstein's & Cortot's Chopin; Bruckner, Mahier. All genres, media, and periods. Also a few LP's at 12 off. 2-9185. )152 MEN'S RAYON DRESS TROUSERS 3.88. Free cuff alterations; assorted colors. Sam's Store, 122. E. Washington. )151 FOR RENT MARRIED COUPLE-Room with break- fast and lunch, kitchen privileges, $6 a Week. 509 Walnut. Call 3-0807. )39F WANTED TO BUY 3-SPEED RALIEGH BICYCLE. Reason- able. Call Al Raygor, 3-850e. )16X WANTED TO RENT 5 OR 6 ROOM HOUSE OR APARTMENT for 3 adults. Will rent as of August or September first. Will consider any dwelling within driving distance to University including outlying country. Write to Box 25. )18W STUDENT TENANTS-Moving out in Aug.? Let us know if you have a 3-4 room apt. Call Jane, U. Ext. 2494, or 3-4459 after 5:00 p.m. )17W HOUSE OR LIVING QUARTERS needed by university instructor and family to sublet until Aug. 20. References. Phone 2-8579. )16W HELP WANTED CARETAKER WANTED-Opposite Rack- ham-Apt. for student for 2 to 4 years in exchange for services. Phone Stew- art 8744 or 25-8882. )58H MISCELLANEOUS AT LIBERTY-German 11 and 12 in- structor does tutoring and translation. A. R. Neumann, 2-7909. )14M ROOM AND BOARD FOOD FOOD FOOD - Home cooked meals for men. Excellent food and coffee. 1319 Hill. ,)4X . ROOM AND BOARD BOARD AT FRATERNITY HOUSE - Short block from Law 4*uad, corne Hill and Oakland. Eating schedule a your convenience. Really good foo Ph. 2-1834.)3 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING WANTED to do in my hom .Experienced. Ph. 7590, 830 S. Main )321 TYPING - Reasonable rates, accural work. Phone 3-4040. )35 WASHING, finished work, and han ironing. Ruff dry and wet washinI Also ironing separately. Free pick-u and delivery. Phone 2-9020. We ape cialize in doing summer dresses. sVj A hit ! Summer weather treat ... BEER. £r friendly drivew thru servie Today and Tomorrow Hold That Ghost ABBOTT & COSTELLO I Killed Geronomo 1 HOUR OF CARTOONS to prevent colossal run totals and multitudes of base-hits. * , ,* THE TEAMS playing in five leagues are reaching the final sage~s of their loop play, in the battle for the all campus title. Ten teams, two from each league (the league winner and runner-up) will square off in an elimination tour- ney to determine the campus sum- mer softball rulers beginning the week of July 22-29. Yesterday's scores: Fletcher 25, Wenley 4. Phi Kappa Sigma 3, Theta Xi 2. ROOMS FOR RENT SHARE APARTMENT with Grad Stu- dent. Save on meals. $8 week. Big yard, continuous hot water. Call 31791. ) 80R CAMPUS Tourist Home. Rooms by Day or Week. Bath, Shower, Television. 518 E. William St. Phone 3-8454. )1R GIRLS ROOMING HOUSE Large studio type room. Two closets. Two beds. Community kitchen. Be- tween campus & hospitals. Ph. 2-2826. )81R "T'Y 4 S- No waiting No parking problem eBEER eWINE *SOFT DRINKS *"KEG BEER Open 10 A.M., Sundays Noon to 7 P.M. 114 East Williams Phone 7191 wre woamo 1. Sigma Chi 3, Theta Delta Chi Chicago 5, Allen-Rumsey 3. Adams 26, Lloyd 7. Zeta Psi 23, Acacia 18. Daily Classifieds Get Quick Resuis Th Department of Speech presents The Department of Speech presents Arthur Miller's adaptation of "An Enemy of the People" by HENRIK IBSEN TONIGHT and SATURDAY - 8 P.M. Admission $1.20--90c-60c (tax incl.) Box Office Open 10 A.M.-8 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOH N THEATRE Fazio Leads Western Openl DAVENPORT, Ia.-(P)-George Fazio, an unassuming 36-year-old professional from Pine Valley, N.- Y. shot a record-smashing 63 yes- terday to take the 18-hole lead in the Western Open Golf Tourna- ment. It was the lowest score in the 48 years of Western Open competi- tion and smashed the Davenport Country Club course record by a single stroke. Player and Club G AB R H 1'4usial, Cardinals 75 283 62 104 Robinson, Dodg'r 76 275 57 98 Ashburn, Phillies 76 138 48 113 Fain, Athletics 77 277 35 96 Williams, R'd Sox 76 268 69 91 Minoso, Wh. Sox 76 264 68 89 RUNS BATTED IN National League Westlake, Cardinals.............. Snider, Dodgers................ Hodges, Dodgers ................- Kiner, Pirates .................... Musial, Cardinals................ American League Williams, Red Sox............... Robinson, White Sox........... Zernial, Athletics ................ * * * HOME RUNS National League Hodges, Dodgers................. Kiner, Pirates .................... Snider, Dodgers ................. Westlake, Cardinals............. American League Zernial, Athletics ................ Williams, Red Sox ............... Robinson, White Sox........... Wertz, Tigers.................. Stephens, Red Sox............ 76 70 60 28 20 18 18 21 16 16 16 14, Pct. .368 .356 .355 .347 .344 .337 61 59 54 54 54 S. L. CINEMA GUILD presentsa REX HARRISON LINDA DARNELL Q eWe are pleased to present this little publicized comedy. In our opinion it is one of the two or three funniest Hollywood made films of the last five years." -The S.L. Cinema Guild ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50c Friday and Saturday 7:30-9:30 TOURNEY UPSETS RARE: Favorites Win in Clay-Court Tennis ARE YOU ELIGIBLE? ,VFW CLUB Open Daily 2:00 P.M.-2:00 A.M. Dancing Fri. & Sat. Nights 314 East Liberty Phone 2-3972 CHICAGO - (-) - Top-seeded favorites, headed by national sin- gles champion Arthur Larsen of San Leandro, Calif., moved into the quarter finals of the 41st Na- tional Claycourt Tennis Champ- ionships attheRiver Forest Ten- nis Club yesterday. Larsen had little trouble defeat- ing Fred Hagist of Sacramento, Calif., 6-3, 6-3. p ____________ _ q!' ,1 HERB FLAM of Beverly Hills, Calif., d e f e a t e d 37-year-old Charles Hare of Chicago, 6-3, 7-5. Joining Flam and Larsen in the upper-bracket quarter final was Hamilton Richardson of Ba- ton Rouge, La., National Junior Champion, who ousted Hugh Stewart of Los Angeles, half of the National Inter-Collegiate doubles champs, 6-2, 7-5. The last singles match of the day gave the other upper bracketl spot to Jiro Kumamaru, Japanese champion and number one man on COUNTRY INN We are now serving luncheons from 11 A.M. From 60 Cents RENTON'S COUNTRY INN Next to Drive Inn Theater on Washtenaw Road the invading Davis Cup squad. Kumamru outlasted Seymour Greenberg of Chicago, 7-5, 7-5. TONY TRABERT of Cincinnati, Interncollegiate Singles Champion and favorite to sweep through this tourney's lower bracket, gained a quarter final berth by whipping Conway Catton of San Francisco, 6-2; 6-4. Another lower-bracket quarter final position went to Fumyteru Nakano, No. 2 Japanese Davis Cup player, who defeated Har- old Burrows of Charlottesville, Va., 4-6, 6-3, 6-4. Grant Golden of Wilmette, Illi- nois, earned a lower-bracket quar- ter finals place with a one-sided win over Erle Themer of Chicago, 6-0, 6-1. In the opening second-round match of the women's singles, Bev- erly Baker of Santa Monica, Calif., seeded No. 1, swept through Mitzi Alex of Chicago, 6-0, 6-0. P BY ARRANGEMENT WITIT INTERNATIONAL THEATRE EXCIIANGE The Department of Speech Presents THE YOUNG IRELAND THEATRE COMPANY 44c until 6:30 Mondau thru Friday -----i A BOSTON POPS CONCERT ON R LONG .RCA VICTO REAY CORDS OVERTURES BY AUBER Fra Diavolo - Crown of Diamonds - The Crown Diamonds - Masaniello BALLET SUITES BY MASSENET AND LUIGINI LeCid - Ballet Egyptien ORCHESTRAL SUITES BY LEROY ANDERSON, AND KABALEVSKY Classical Juke Box - The Comedians TWO OVERTURES BY TCHAIKOVSKY Capriccio Italien - 1812 Overture GAITE PARISIENNE-BALLET MUSIC (OFFENBACH) Complete Score as Performed by Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo VIENNESE WALTZES BY JOHANN STRAUSS On The Beautiful Blue Danube - Treasure Waltz - Tales from the Vienna Woods k1 h rift- A m 1aff. - A tA% . ..u&AII IA 1 &"0%1 n. i ii iii 44e to 5 P.M. . ~ ~CONTINUOUSToa DAILY FROM 1 P.M. * " and A T -A- T E Saturday OF DUBLIN I In a repertoire of modern Irish plays I I II ii W . 4 T i .M A F N ff 'U 111111. ice": . ; !" . !'/lli:ly I !I