THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1952 ThE MICHIGAN DjAILY rAGE T All-Stars Angry after Rainout NL Smoulders as Stengel National League Stars Laud A I' Blames Loss on Downpour Mighty Midget Shantz of AL PHILADELPHIA-(P)-The tri- umphant National League All- Stars should have been happy yes- terday with their third straight victory over the American League. Instead, they were bitter-and all their bitterness was directed at their beaten rivals. * * * "SO CASEY STENGEL blames their defeat on the weather?" a National League All-Star parti- cipant echoed. "That's a lot of sour grapes. What's the matter? Don't they like it when the shoe is on the other foot?" "I suppose the raindrops car- ried those two home-run blasts by Jackie Robinson angd Hank Sauer over the wall," the in- dignant National Leaguer con- tinued. "If anybody has a beef about the rain, it should be us. They would not have scored either of their two runs if the ground had not been wet and slippery." Earlier, Manager Stengel was asked to what he attributed the American's 3-2 defeat in Tues- day's game that was cut to five innings because of incessant rain. "I AIN'T blaming anybody," the r gnarled old skipper of the New York Yankees said at first. Then he ventured, "maybe the rain." "Can't tell what would have happened if we'd played out the game. I had some good men on the bench ready to send in, guys like Mickey Mantle, Vic Wertz, Ferris Fain and Eddie Yost." There is no question but what the rain and muddy field marred the play, but it didn't appear to hamper the pitchers and it had ittle effect, if any, on the Na- tional League sluggers. ,, * * NEITHER RAIN, nor snow, nor sleet would have prevented Sauer's terrific blast from clearing the wall with Stan Musial on base in the fourth inning. That mighty home hun, a 430- footer that landed atop the roof and bounded out of the premises, equalized the two-run splurge of the Americans in the top of the fourth and gave the Nationals their seventh win in 19 clashes and Manager Leo Durocher's first in three at- tempts. Stengel, who has whip- ped the Nationals in the last three World Series, has now dropped the last three All-Star games. Coming on top of the robust four-bagger belted by Jackie Rob- inson in the first inning, Sauer's blow proved for the third consecu- tive year that the balance of pow- er has definitely swung towards the older circuit. ' 4 .' * JACKIE ROBINSON'S inability to come up with a double-play grounder in the fourth made pos- sible both American tallies. The Brooklyn Dodger second baseman could not get a firm footing on a treacherous terrain and Eddie Ro- binson's hard-hit grounder went for a single and scored Minnie Minoso from second. The Chicago White Sox outfielder had led off with a solid double just before Al losen had drawn a base on balls. Bobby Avila followed with a hopper behind second that Rob- inson knocked down bu& couldn't hold, and Rosen crossed the plate. Little Bobby Shantz of the Phil- adelphia Athletics drew the loud- est praises from the victorious Na- tional League All-Stars. The soft-spoken mite tossed only thirteen pitches for the los- ing side, but' with them he struck out three of the senior circuit's sharpest hitters. RELIEVING losing pitcher Bob Lemon in the top of the fifth, the five-foot, seven-inch, 145-pound lefty flashed his fast ball through the downpour to strike out Whitey Lockman (.307), Jackie Robinson CASEY STENGEL *.. .nothing for three Yankees, Brooklyn Following Different Pennant Formulas NEW YORK--P-)-The Brook- lyn Dodgers and the New York Yankees are using different "for- mulas" in their 1952 pennant drives. Brooklyn is employing the meth- od used successfully by the late John McGraw, once manager of the New York Giants. *, * * McGRAW'S SIMPLE pennant philosophy was to "beat the bush- ers." The fiery Giant immortal brought 10 pennants to the Polo Grounds. The Yanks' theory is just the opposite. The Bombers say, "Knock off your nearest rival." The Yanks always seem to reach the heights in a crucial series. Brooklyn's four - and - a - half- game 'lead over the New York Giants today was built chiefly on the Dodgers' success against the sixth, seventh and eighth place THE DODGERS have won 33 games and lost only one to the last three teams in the standings. The Giants have captured 22 and lost six from the same three clubs. The Brooks have won only 18 games and dropped 20 against the other five teams. The Chicago Cubs are the only other rival the Brooks hold an advantage over.' The Dodgers have won six out of nine from the fourth-place Bruins. The Yanks, seeking their fourth straight flag and 19th since 1920, have won 19 and lost 11 to first- division opponents and stand 26-18 over the lower-echelon teams. Iajor League Standings (.315) and Stan Musial (.333) in swift succession. "The kid is a wonder," mar- veled Leo Durocher, who piloted the National Leaguers to their third straight triumph. "If that's the kind of stuff he throws, I'm glad we didn't have to face him any more." The three top hitters Shantz struck out were equally impressed. "I CAN SEE why he has that (14-3) record," declared Robin- son, whose first-inning homer off starter Vic Raschi gave the Na- tional League a 1-0 lead. "He threw me three curves and two change-ups. And if he had thrown his fast curve sooner, I'd have struck out sooner." Musial, the only hatter to hit so much as a foul off Shantz, said the mighty mite of the Athletics had "a tremendous assortment." Lockman paid particular praise to Shantz' control. "He's really Co-recreation night will be held at the Intramural Sports Building on Friday beginning at 7:30 p.m. and continuing until 10:00 p.m. Both students and faculty are cordially in- vited. -Rod Grambeau got it, no question about that," said the Giant first-sacker. Shantz, himself, said he wasn't concentrating on striking anyone out. "I was merely trying to get them to hit the first pitch," said the little southpaw. IM SCORES Fletcher 11, Social Research 0 Bartenders 4, Hardrocks 3 Jokers 23, Delta Sigma Phi 6 Zeta Psi 3, Van Tyne 2 Scott 20, Chemistry "B" 12 Rod's Boys 25, Air Force 7 MICHIGAN'S ULTRA MODERN SHOP AIR CONDITIONED 6 Barbers Special Attention Given Ladies' & Children's Hair Cutting U of M BARBERS 715 N. University T.V. For Your Enjoyment Smash Comedy! Presented by The Department of Speech by Mary Chose PULITZER PRAZEAWARD Tonite thru Sat. $1.20, 90c, 60c BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. 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Write Reeves Co., Attle- boro, Mass., Free Sample and details. l NATIONAL LEAGUE w Brooklyn ...........51 New York ..........47 St. Louis..........46 Chicago...........42 Philadelphia ........35 Cincinnati ........33 Boston. .........30 Pittsburgh .........21 L 21 26 34 34 40 44 46 59 Pet. .708 .644 .575 .545 .467 .429 .395 .263 I TV TODAY'S GAMES New York at Pittsburgh (N) Boston at Cincinnati (N) Brooklyn at Chicago (N) Philadelphia at St. Louis (N) AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. New York ..........45 29 .608 Chicago ,............44 34 .564 Cleveland ..........42 33 .560 washington ........39 34 .534 Boston............39 36 .520 Philadelphia ........31 37 .456 St. Louis ...........32 45 .416 Detroit .............25 49 .338 TODAY'S GAMES GB 4a/ 9 11% 17% 2012~ 23 34 GB 3 2 ]/ 5Y2 62 11 141/ 20 al1 '1 I I Read and Use DAILY CLASSIFIEDS 1 Chicago at Washington (2) (Twi- night) Cleveland at Philadelphia (N) St. Louis at New York (N) Detroit at Boston (N) ANN ARBOR'S ONLY CHINESE RESTAURANT AMERICAN DISHES ALSO SERVED 1 A.M.-9 P.M. Closed Tuesdays LANTERN GARDENS 613 E. Liberty q I p Cie~aSL "ui/ Presents ROBERT MONTGOMERY PINK HORSE A story of the Mexican border - vengeance and desperate manhunt behind the mask of gay fiesta. "A Fascinating Film!". .. N. Y. TIMES with WANDA THOMAS HENDRIX GOMEZ Also CHARLIE CH APLIN n "T- I IAAAAI'DAKlT" "On The Loose" with M JOAN EVANS MELVIN DOUGLAS All Performances at 8 P.M. 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