SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1952' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Last Inning Four Run Chicago Rally Nips m PAGE THREE iegrs <"> Journalist Asks Kentucky To Quit Southeastern Loop Major League Standings Braves Shut Out New York; Brooklyn Halts Philadelphia 4 LEXINGTON, Ky. (P)-A Lex- ington sports writer suggested Fri- day that "perhaps the best thing that could happen would be for the University of Kentucky to say 'Nunts to you,' pull out of the f Southeastern Conference and let go with a blast directed at the SEC while a few sparks fly off in other f directions." LARRY SHROPSHIRE, sports reditor of the Lexington Leader de- clared in his daily column that while days and weeks pass with no word from leaders of the South- eastern Conference on what they intend to say or do as a result of their inquiry into the school's ath- letic practices, "the local school suffers more as each day drops off the calendar." The conference conducted a. probe into the school's athletic : set-up, at the request of the uni- versity, after several Kentucky basketball players became in- volved in the nation-wide bas- ketball fix scandal. A meeting was held recently in Birmingham at which representa- tives of the University appeared before the SEC executive commit- . tee. An announcement concerning r the results of the investigation was expected following this meet- ing, but this was delayed. t SHROPSHIRE questioned the right of "conference executives to infer, by a prolonged 'jury ses- sion' and delayed 'verdict,' that Kentucky has been decreed guilty of some evil operations and must face penalty or punishment." * Shropshire stated that SEC T schools for years have been do- ing what Kentucky is presumed to have done "after Kentucky finally got the urge to quit being E a door-mat and to compete on equal terms with conference ri- vals. That, of course, boils down to going out and hunting for good athletes and trying by one means or another to get them enrolled and keep them eligible and happy.' Yet, Shropshire said, Kentucky has been on trial, and, "in effect already convicted because it has, - in a manner of speaking, 'been caught.'" NATI Brooklyn New Work St. Louis Philadelphi Chicago Boston Cincinnati Pittsburgh ONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. 67 32 .677 62 38 .620 62 44 .585 ia 56 47 .544 52 51 .505 42 60 .412 43 63 .406 30 79 .275 GB 5r/ 81/ 13 17 26%/ 27%/ 42 GB 35 5 611 9 9' 18 261/ AMERICAN W New York 64 Cleveland 60 Boston 56 Washington 56 Philadelphia 52 Chicago 54 St. Louis 46 Detroit 36 LEAGUE L Pet. 45 .587 47 .561 47 .544 50 .528 49 .515 53 .505 63 .422 70 .340 CLASSIFIEDSI ROOMS FOR RENT ICHIGAN DAILY OVERNIGHT GUESTS?-Make reserva.- Phone 23-24-1 tions at The Campus Tourist Homes1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. now. 518 E. William. Phone 3-8454. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING CAMBRIDGE 1430- double, 1 single RATES for men. L DAYS ROOMS FOR FALL - 906 Greenwood LINES DAY 3 DAYS 6A apartment, double & singles. Refrig-t 2 .60 1.34 .96 erator privileges, hollywood beds, De-I 4 .70 1.8 .9 troit landord. Cal Jack Bergstrom " 4 .90 2.24 3.2 triladodCalJcBegrmI.9 2-7108 or write Stu Hertzberg, 1-7617I Figure 5 overage words to a line. Ohio Detroit, Mich. Classified deadline daily except Saturday is 3 P.M.,Sturdays, ATTRACTIVE, comfortable rooms for 11:30 A.M., for Sunay issuer grad. students or prof. men. 1402 Hill. 1S sPh. 2-3781. FOR SALE BUSINESS SERVICES ANTIQUE CHAI:RS - 1 Hitchcock, 1 TYPING - Reasonable rates. Accurate. Duncan Pyfe. 1 arm Windsor, I comb Efficient. Phone 7590, 830 8. Main, back Windsor. 1 tut top table Mis- cellaneous objects: candle sticks, WASHING, finished work, and hand lamps, dishes, fixtures. 1918 Day Ph. ironing. Cotton dresses a specialty.t 2-1710. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also tron-S ing separately. Free pick-up and de. ART BALI private collection, Oils, water livery. Phone 2-9020. colors prtfolios, books 1918 Day.I Phone 2-4710. RADIO SERVICE HOUEME TRAILER- wall with built in Auto - home - Portable boo case. 30 ft. "cozy-coach". has Phono & T.VI natural wood finish throughout, elec- Past & Reasonable Service S trio refrigerator, electric hot water ANN ARBOR RADIO & T heater. Very liberal terms. Can be "Student Service" "%tudentS eice" @ seen at 410 E. Jeff. 1215 So. Univ., Ph. 7942 FOR SALE-Silver Tint Mouton Coat, 13 blocks east of East ngin. % length. Almost new. 1028 Stock- ALTERATIONS on ladies garments re- well, serve for future us. A. Graves. P 2-2678.. 8TRADIVARIOUS VIOLIN, case, in fine Phone 26 condition, Call 2-1661, 7 to 10 a.m. H ELP WANTED MEN'S ENGLISH BIKE-Headlight, car- rier, good condition. Ph. 2-8278. INTERVIEWERS for part time opinion surveys. College background preferred, LINGUAPHONE SPANISH COURSE - not essential. Experience not neces- Records and text. $35. Phone 2-8871.. ary. Answer fully. Box 18. OLDS CONVERTIBLE 1937-R & H, new H EL P top, excellent condition. Call 3-826H. wanted for Fall semester. Phone 6007.S FOR RENT AVAILABLE - A new 3-room de- TRANSPORTATION u luxe apartment which accommodates RIDERS WANTED to Kallispell, Mont. four. Completely furnished, electric e abou ug. 11.K Pn 7138. stove and refrigerator. Private en-_'_ trance. $95 per month. Will rent for 2 or 3 RIDERS WANTED-Driving toS summer. Need a ar. Call 2-9020. Kansas City, Missouri. August 1 or 2. References: exchange phone 2-3006 be- NEAR CAMPUS - Unfurnished 4 room tween 6 and 7 p.m.f op't-tile bath, no heat nor utilities.__________________ Has stove and refrigerator. No pets. DRIVING to salem, Oregon. Leave Aug. School-age child preferred. $95. Ph. 15. Need riders to share gas and ex- 6465 penses. Bob Preston, 3-8774.S MALE STUDENT to share basement .' ap't; good location. Private room. $30 ROOM AND BOARD 0 per mo. Ph. 5830. a BOARD AND ROOM at 1026 Oakland. ATTRACTIVE APT. near Campus to $280.00 a semester. Make reservations sublet July 15 to Sept. 15. Real bar- before Wed., Aug. 13. Phone 2-8269.C gain for right tenant. 3-1479 evenings,. ROOMS FOR RENT PERSONAL 4 STUDENTS-large, spacious 2 bedroom LAST CALL- furnished ap't. twin beds, (practice for all summer school students to room available for music students.) obtain magazines at special low rate. ? $125 a month. Also single room 320 B. Phone 6007 except Sundays-Student Washington after 4 P.M. Periodical Agency. t r - a TRAVELER'Ss ;x CHECKS i SAFE i'' CONVENIENT and can be Y'CASHED ANYWHERE QUICKLY Conservation Board Allows Deer Hunting GRAYLING-QP)-Three days of rifle hunting for deer of either sex throughout the northern Lower Peninsula this fall were approved yesterday by the State Conserva- tion Commission. This method of reducing the over-populated herd was approved on a five to one vote over the more cautious recommendation of the Conservation Department Game Division for a special season the first seven days in December in limited Northern Lower Peninsula areas. * * * COMMISSIONER Donald B. McLouth of Detroit led the move to open the last three days of the regular season to shooting of bucks, does and fawns north of highway M-20 and south of the Straits of Mackinac. Commissioner Richard H. Fletcher of Bay City voted against the motion, holding with the game division that it was too drastic to be swallowed by the public. Game men admitted, however, that even shooting deer of either sex in the region in the whole 16- day season would not seriously de- plete the deer. * " * THUS DEER hunting will be permitted as usual throughout the state, starting Nov. 15 and ending Nov. 30. In the Upper Peninsula and Southern Lower Peninsula, bucks with three-inch antlers on- ly may be shot throughout the period and only shotguns may be used in the Southern Lower. Pen- insula. In the Northern Lower Penin- sula, bucks only may be shot Nov. 15 through Nov. 27 but any deer will be legal game Nov. 28, 29, and 30. The commission retained on special season to follow the regu- lar season by authorizing contin- uance of regulations permitting shooting of any deer under spe- cial permit in Allegan County Dec. 1 through 7. This post season shooting has been permitted for many years and has been success- ful in holding deer within bounds. THE BOW and arrow deer sea- son was left unchanged, running from Oct. 1 through Nov. 5. Deer of either sex may be killed by archers in all of the Lower Pen- insula except Menominee and Chippewa where they may only take bucks. The commission set the wat- er-fowl season to open Oct. 1, the earliest in years and ap- proved a 55-day season, 10 days longer than last year. Liberaliz- ed federal regulations to permit this decision to become final were expected momentarily from Washington. The woodcock season, subject also to federal rgeulations, was set o coincile exactly with previously et upland bird hunting seasons. The commission approved pay- ing $40,940 for 984 acres of land and one water frontage parcel to add to existing game areas and one state forest. CHICAGO- (P)-The Chicago White Sox last night exploded a four run ninth inning rally with six hits to defeat Detroit 4-3 in the first game of a twilight-night double header before an estimated 20,000. Bill Hoeft held the White Sox to four hits before retiring . in the sixth because of a back injury. Don Kolloway clouted his first homer of the season in the sev- enth to score Matt Batts ahead of him. * * * THE TIGERS used three pitch- ers in the ninth in an attempt to stave off the Chicago rally. With one out Sam Mele sing- led and Tom Wright doubled, Mele going to third. Sherm Lol- lar singled past third to load the bases. Hal Brown ran for Lol- lar. Ed Stewart, batting for Wil- lie Miranda, singled, scoring Mele. Dick Littlefield replaced Marlin Stuart for Detroit. Krsnich batted for Billy Pierce and fanned. Then Hector Rodri- guez singled, scoring Wright and Brown with the tying run. After Stuart's hit, Virgil Trucks replaced Littlefield and Fox singled scoring Stewart with the winning tally. * * * BRAVES 2, GIANTS 0 BOSTON-(P)-After being fet- ed by a delegation of his Pawtuck- et, R. I., hometownsmen, right- hander Max Surkont last night limited the New York Giants to four hits while hurling the Boston Braves to a 2-0 shutout over the National League Champions. The Braves totaled eight hits off Max Lanier and clinched matters in the first inning on singles by Sam Jethroe and Bob Thorpe, an infield out and an error. * * * WHILE turning in his seventh win against 10 losses, two of which were to the Giants, Surkont struck out three and gave up four bases on balls without being in the slightest danger of losing his shut- out. Surkont, showered with gifts during the pre-game ceremonies gave up the first New York hit to Bobby Thomson in the second inning. But that was rendered harmless by Don Mueller's drib- ble into a double play. Former Brave Alvin Dark was held hitless on four trips as he broke his 22-game streak. Only two Giants got as far as second base during the 104 minutes of action. * * * DODGERS 6, PHILLIES 3 PHILADELPHIA - (iP) - Andy Pafko clouted a three-run 10th inning homer last night to give the Brooklyn Dodgers a 6 to 3 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. The win put the league-leading Dodgers six and a half games in front of the New York Giants who lost last night to the Boston Braves. * * * PAFKO WAS the Dodgers' big gun, batting in five of their six runs with his homer, a double and long fly ball. The loss- was a heartbreaker for Curt Simmons, Philadelphia left-hander, who was pounded hard in the first two innings and then settled down. At one point in mid-game, he retired 10 men in order. Preacher Roe, the third Brook- lyn hurler who took over in the eighth, received credit for the win. * * * THE BROOKLYN outburst in the tenth started with a single by leadoff man Peewee Reese. After Jackie Robinson sacrificed, Roy Campanella was purposely walked. Then came Pafko's three-run hom- er blasted into the leftfield stands. * * * Tam Golf Meet Paced ByFerrier CHICAGO-(AP)--Big Jim Fer- rier, the unorthodox swinger and master putter, slammed into a two-stroke lead over Lew Wor- sham at the 36 hole mark of the $90,000 "World Golf Champion- ship" at Tam O'Shanter yesterday with a blistering second round of 66 for a 134 total, 10 under par. Ferrier, a 37-year-old Australian who came to the U.S. in 1940 and hit his biggest golfing jackpot by winning the 1947 National PGA Crown, needed only 27 putts in carving a 31-35 against Tam's bat- tered par of 36-36-72. He tacked his second trip 66 to an opening 68. * * * WORSHAM HAD to scramble for his front side 33 then blew in the pressure-packed meet that pays an unprecedented $25,000 to the winner wit ha 7 on the par 5 475-yard 10th hole. The 34-year-old Worsham sent his second shot into a trap at No. 10 then blasted out over the green. is chip was short of the carpet and he needed 5 to get on and two putts to get down. He missed the green on the 13th for a big 5 and didn't settle down until the 15th when he reached the 515-yard hole in two and two putted for a birdie 4. * * * BILL CAMPBELL of Hunting- ton, W. Va., the 29-year-old ex- state legislator, continued to top the men's amateurs with a dupli- cating 68 for 136. Defending Champion Frank Stran an kept on the Southerner's hee s with a .32-36-68 for a 138 tally. Heading the women's amateur group was Joyce Ziske, the Water- ford, 'is., teenager, with an 82- 77-159.1 Coach Biggie Munn yesterday invited seventy players to the first grid practice of the Michigan State Spartans on September 3. Pictures -of the gridders are scheduled to be taken on the day before the official practice starts. Detroit Craft Hay Wint 45th Gold Cup Race SEATTLE-(P)--Reading strict- ly from the face of the clock, to- day's 45th running of the Gold Cup speedboat classic looks like a two- boat battle matching a blimpy monster from Detroit and the sau- cy, saucerish pride of Seattle, the Slo-Mo-Shun V. When the cannon roars for the start of the first heat at 1 p.m., (PDT), 4 p.m., (EDT) the mam- moth crowd will center its atten- tion on the clash for position be- tween Detroit's Miss Pepsi and the romping Slo-Mo. * * * . FOUR OTHER boats will be in there knocking but they escaped the glare of the spotlight by quali- fying at unimpressive speeds. The Slo-MoMShun IV, Seattle sister of the cup-defending V, averaged 93.023 in her three lap, nine-mile qualifying run. Such Crust got in with a tim- ing of 91.135, Miss Great Lakes II, was timed in 88.888. The Hurricane IV, a Los Angeles bzidder, was clocked in 89.776 as the whole field beat the 75 m.p.h. minimum with ease. * * * MISS PEPSI'S two howling en- gines yanked her five tons over the Lake Washington course at an av- erage of 103.448, breaking the qual- ifying record for the second suc- cessive year. Last year she set the mark at 100.5586, but, this was cracked when the Slo-Mo V qual- ified Monday at 102.564. A year ago Miss Pepsi chased the V to a lap record of 108.66, but then she conked out and the Slo-Mo went on to win with ease. This year the same drivers will be feuding again, Chuck Thomp- son in the Pepsi and reckless Lou Fageol in the V. Not a one of the other boats can be counted out. Both the Hurri- cane and the Such Crust turned trial laps at better than 100. The Slo-Mo IV holds the world speed record of 178.497 miles per hour, won the cup in 1950 and placed third last year. MISS GREAT LAKES was rush- ed into her qualifying run without much warmup and gave little in- dication of what she might be abl&, to do. It takes three heat of 30 miles each to decide the race and these will be run two hours apart. The second is scheduled to start at 3 p.m. and the third at 5 p.m. (PDT). Michigan State Set To Open Grid Drills September 3rd COACH MUNN has twenty-six lettermen back from last year's undefeated, untied team which ranked second in the, nation in the football polls at the end of the season. Tennessee was given the top spot, with the University of Maryland taking third place. Tennessee met Maryland in the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans on January 1, 1952 and the Vols were soundly beaten 28-13. Maryland thus can lay strong claim to the number one spot. Midwest fans however consider that the Michigan State squad was just about the best in the land despite the outcome of the polly or bowl games. The team includes nineteen sen- iors, the' same number of juniors, twenty-eight sophomores and four freshmen. * * * THE FRESHMEN are eligible because they enrolled last year. No first-year men enrolling this year will be eligible under West- ern Conference rules. The Spartans must find a re- placement for Al Dorow, their graduated quarterback. At the present there is a two man bat- te for the vacant position with Tom Yewcic, a junior from Con- emaugh, Pennsylvania and Wil- lie Thrower, a senior from New Kensington, Pennsylvania being the participants. Thrower, as his name would indicate, is an excellent passer. Michigan State is loaded with powerful fullbacks. The Green and White have Dick Panin of De- troit, Wayne Benson of Harvey, Illinois, Evan Slonac from St. Michael, Pennsylvania and Ed Timmeiman from Grand Rapids. *Panin. broke last year's Notre Dame game wide open when on the first play from scrimmage he carried the ball from the. Michigan State twelve yard line all the way to a touchdown. * * * THE SPARTANS will miss their All-American end Bob Carey, but there is plenty of strength in their end corps for 1952. Doug Bobo, Paul Dekker, Ed Luke, Don Do- honey and Ellis Duckett should stand the Spartans in good stead during the coming season. Duckett was converted to the }flank posi- tion from halfback because the Michigan State coaches felt that there was an over-surplus of tal- ent in the backfield 'and not enough at the ends. The Spartans' All-America candidate at guard, Frank Kush of Windber, Pennsylvania is re* covering from the near-tragic accident which befell him over the summer. The schedule calls for the usual two-a-day drills with the emphs- sis on getting in top condition for the rigorous seasan to come. The Spartans open against Michigan on September 27 at Ann Arbor. MOSTLY COAST TEAMS: BigTen To Play Intersectional Foes- Big Ten, football squads will take part in several of this sea- son's major intersectional clashes: All of these games, with the ex- ception of the Michigan-Cornell battle will feature mid-Western teams against squads from the Pa- cific Coast Conference. * * * WISCONSIN will square off against the powerful Bruins of U.C.L.A. in what should be a mighty tussle. The Illini will tangle with the Washington Hus- kies for the third straight year. Washington has lost both times by seven points, but in both instances Illinois had to come from behind in the last quarter to achieve vic- tory. Michigan will play the de- fending Coast Conference cham- pion Stanford Indians on the second Saturday of the season. Last year Stanford ended a Mi- chigan domination of Pacific Coast teams which began back on New Year's Day of 1902. On that date, Fielding H. Yost's first "Point-a-Minute" t e a m licked the' Stanford squad by a 49-0 score in what was the fore-runner of the modern Rose Bowl Game. The Wolverines continued to beat teams from the far-West. In 1940 they walloped California 41- 0, in 1947 they beat Stanford 49- 13 during the regular season and inflicted the now famous 49-0 slaughter on Southern California in. the Rose Bowl. In 1948 Chuck Ortmann outpassed Norm Van- Broklin and the Maize and Blue dumped Oregon here at Ann Ar- bor 14-0. In 1949 Stanford was again beaten, 27-7 out on the coast. In the Rose Bowl game on January 1, 1951 the Wolverines succeeded in coming from behind with two last-quarter touchdowns, to beat a favored Galifornia squad 14-6. STANFORD'S 23-13 victory here in the stadium last year sent the Indians on their way to the championship of the coast league. Minnesota will get a look at two coast squads in their first two games this season. The Go- phers open with Washington and follow that up with Califor- nia. Coach Wes Fesler's team played a great game against the Huskies last year, losingonly by a touch- down scored late in the fourth period. Against Lynn Waldorf's California Bears however, the Go- phers were helpless. The boys from Berkely buried Minnesota under a 55-14 score. The fifty-five points represents the largest total ever amassed against a Minnesota team. Michigan came close at mid- season with a 54-27 victory over the Gophers. OHIO STATE will try its luck against Washington State in Co- lumbus. The Cougars said good- bye to Forrest Evashevski over the winter. They may have 'said fare-, well to succssful football too, for Evashevski had lifted the team from a doormat to a squad strong enough to play Pappy Waldorf's mighty Beads to a 42-35 game last fall. In non-conference action clos- er to home, Notre Dame will ap- pear on the schedules of Iowa, Purdue and Michigan State. The Irish played all three last autumn, coming out all even with PLAYING TONIGHT one win, one loss and on tie. They] beat Purdue 30-9, were adughter- ed by Michigan State 35-0, and managed to salvage a tie with Iowa 20-20. * * * MICHIGAN STATE, a member of the Big Ten in everything but football competition until next year, will meet some far-flung foes. The Spartans will play Ore- gon State on the, coast, will meet the Texas Aggies at Macklin Field, and will also play host to Penn State and Syracuse. The University of Pittsburgh is another popular opponent for Big Ten teams. The Panthers will play Iowa, Indiana and Ohio State. Pitt will also take on Notro Dame, Oklahoma and Army, which along with the Western Conf;- ence opposition should give the Smoky City lads a busy season. Fountain Pens Greeting Cards Stationery Office Supplies Typewriters W/C Tape & Wire Recorders Steel Desks, Chairs, Piles 3.MORRI LL'S 314 S. State -. I C Phone 7177 Open Saturdays until 1 P.M. FINAL SUMMER PROGRAM LAST TIMES TONIGHT DOORS OPEN 5:40 P.M. CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS FROM 5:45 P.M. FEATURE SHOWN 3 TIMES NIGHTLY SECOND SHOW 7:15 - LAST SHOW 9:30 (See Time Schedule Below) ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S MASTERPIECE OF SUSPENSE "THE LADY VANISHES" A GAUMONT-BRITISH PICTURE MICHAEL MARGARET PAUL DAME MAY REDGRAVE LOCKWOOD LUKAS WHITTY "BRILLIANT comedy ... BRILLIANT melodrama. . . when your sides are not aching from laughter, your brain is throbbing in its attempts to outguess the director . , . we cannot conceal our admiration.", -N.Y. Times ALSO PARE LORENTZ'S POETIC STUDY OF THE MISSISSIPPI "THE RIVER" A MASTERPIECE OF THE AMERICAN SCREEN MUSIC BY VIRGIL THOMPSON I i M M 4 M M M % I I I COOL COOL NOW SHOWING Roaring EXCITEMENT at the Crossroads of the West! 4 . x ' "MARU MARU" with * ERROL FLYNN _and "Bugles in The Afternoon" with 0 RAY MILLAND BEGINS SEPT. 2 Prepare quickly for a business position In nine months to eighteen months you con be ready for an office position such as: Secretary Bookkeeper Accountant Office Clerk Stenographer Typist In Military Service: WE * ~ ~ I I I I ...,.,. r ,,. I )l