FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1953 THE MICHIGAN IDAILY PAGE TRER THREE IN A ROW: Indians Batter New York,10-2 r tusu .j~ ..."? '?rn... n uf> rilsr .. By The Associated Press CLEV[ELAND - The Cleveland Indians beat the league-leading New York Yankees, 10-2, yester- day for their third victory in as many days over Casey Stengel's club. Early Wynn, aiding his own cause with three hits that drove in two runs, won his tenth game of the season. It was the sixth straight victory over New York for the Tribe, which had dropped its first seven encounters with the Yanks. THREE HOME RUNS provided the big punch among Cleveland's 14 hits. Luke Easter connected for a 435-foot round-tripper in the second inning to get the Indians under way. Al Rosen belted his 25th hom- er of the season in the sixth off rookie Art Shallock. The Yankee pitcher was blasted for five runs in the inning with the trouble starting after two were out. BEN HOGAN sits on the back of an open car as it moves up lower Broadway in New York (July 21) enrout to a city hall reception. 1 The diminutive Texan who won the British Open at Carnoustie, Scotland, early in the month, received the traditional ticker tape welcome from New Yorkers. Easter reached first on an in- field error and moved to second on a walk to Doby. George Strick- land followed with, his fourth home run of the season to drive in three runs. Joe Tipton singled to right and scored when Wynn doubled over the head of center- fielder Irv Noren. Yogi Berra hit his 16th homer of the season in the eighth, but by that time the Yanks were out of contention. RED SOX 4, WHITE SOX 3 CHICAGO - The Boston Red Sox, with Hector (Skinny) Brown pitching a four-hitter, beat the second place Chicago White Sox 4-3 at Comiskey Park yesterday. It was the tenth triumph of the year against two defeats for Brown, who was traded to the Red Sox by Chicago last winter. Hoot Evers hit his ninth homer of the year in the fifth with Johnny Lip- on on base. The defeat was charged to Chi- cago starter Saul Rogovin, his 11th against five victories. Ace reliever Harry Dorish worked the last two innings for the Pale Hose. TIGERS 9-6, SENATORS 6-4 DETROIT - The Detroit Tigers, making a bid to climb out of the cellar, swept a doubleheader from the stumbling Washington Sena- tors yesterday, 9-6 in the first game on Ray Boone's homer in the tenth, and 5-4 in the nightcap on Jerry Priddy's key two-run single. Priddy's single climaxed a three- run burst in the fifth inning and .gave the Tigers a 4-2 lead which I-M SOFTBALL U.H. Doctors 25, Chemistry "B" 3 Hinsdale 11, Phi Delta Phi 3 they held fQr Ted Gray's fifth vic- tory against 11 losses. In winning their fourth straight game, the Tigers trimmed Connie Marrero who had an 8-1 lifetime record against Detroit. He worked' the first six innings and was touched for all the Tiger runs. Washington has now lost 11 of its last 12 games. aEjor League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE FOR SALE SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS $1.39. Skip-dents, sanforized, whites and assorted colors. Sam's Store, 122 East Washington St. SMALL walnut gateleg table $40. One large oak sideboard $5.00. One large double-coil springs $15.00. pne up- holstered chair $1.00. One large wal- nut veneer table and five chairs $25. One wool rug $65. Two large walnut veneer buffets, $15 each. One small folding steel cot $10.00. Large daven- port with green leatherette, $15. Two doll high chairs, $2.50reach. Phone 2-9020. CANARIES and Parakeets. Bird supplies and cages. 526 S. Seventh at W. Mad- ison. Mrs. Louise Ruffins. FOR SALE-1948 4-door English Austin. Good tires and body, rebuilt motor. An excellent, economical car. Call 2-6520 after 6:00. MODEL A-Excellent condition. Looks and runs like new. R. Johnston, 1015 E. Huron. FOR SALE SELECTION of pieces from personal col- lection of Japanese laquer boxes, trays. brocade, dolls, prints, frames and por- celain. Afternoons and evenings. 2388 Pinecrest Rd., Pittsfield Park. 3-0339. PHONOGRAPH-Portable 3-speed, Web- ster-Chicago changer with Newcomb amplifier. For the music lover who wants better tone and fidelity with more power than the usual portable phonograph. Original price, $130. Only $85. Completely guaranteed. Ann Ar- bor.Radio & T.V., 1215 So. Univ. Ph. 7942. WASHING WASHINE-Small table top type. Perfect shape. Only $17.50. Ann Arbor Radio. 1215 So. Univ. Ph. 7942. FOK RENT APARTMENTS, roomettes, or rooms by day or week for campus visitors. Campus Tourist Homes, 518 E. Wil- 1iam St. Phone 3-8454. DELUXE Bachelor Apt. Private entrance. Semi-private bath. Between Ypsi and Ann Arbor. $67.50 a month. Ph. 2-9020. PERSONAL w New York ...,......61 Chicago .....,......57 Cleveland ......,..53 Boston .............53 Washington ........43. Philadelphia .......36 St. Louis ............33 Detroit ............31 L 30 35 38 40 50 54 60 60 Pet. .670 .620 .582 .570 .462 .400 .355 .341 GB 4% 8 9 19 24% 29 30 ROOMS FOR RENT LARGE, clean double rooms for men students. Fall. Ph. 3-1873. HELP WANTED WANTED-Taxi cab drivers, full or part tine. Yellow and Checker Cab Co. 113 S. Ashley. Ph. 9382. ATTENTION-Aspiring, young, beauti- ful actresses desiring a rapid rise. Contact Morgan and Kahan Theatri- cal Producers and Directors. 3-4280. BUSINESS SERVICES WASHING, Finished Work, and Sand Ironing. Cotton dresses a specialty. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also iron ing separately. Free pick-up and de- livery. Phone 2-9020. EXPERT TYPIST -- Rates reasonable. Prompt service. 914 Mary Street,. 3-4449. RADIO-PHONO SERVICE Fast-In Today, Ready Tomorrow Reasonable Rates-Guaranteed Service Phonos & Auto Radios Our Specialty New & Used Radios & Phonos Custom Auto Radios at Reduced Prices ANN ARBOR RADIO & T.V. 1215 So. Universitv Ph. 7942 ALL CONTENDERS: Big Ten Loaded with Gridiron Power (Third in a series) By IVAN N. KAYE The greatest concentration of football strength this autumn will undoubtedly reside in the Western Conference. Never before in its 58 year exis- tence has the Big Ten been so loaded with gridiron powerhouses. MICHIGAN STATE, the na- tion's number one team last year, will be playing its first conference schedule. Add to the Spartans the perennial title contenders Ohio State and Michigan, the defending conference co-champions Wiscon- sin and Purdue, plus always dan- gerous Minnesota and Illinois, and top this list off with an improved Northwestern team, and it be- comes apparent that the heartland of football in 1953 will be the Western Conference. Just outside the realm of the Big Ten, but still within the confines of Midwestern football lies the powerful Notre Dame team of Frank Leahey. The. Irish, after a great season in 1952, which included victories over four conference champions, will field a stronger eleven, and should make headlines on sports pages across the land again this autumn. Notre Dame will face Georgia Tech in an all-important game early in the season. The Engineers won eleven in a row last fall, and capped their brilliant campaign with' a bruising 24-7 victory over unbeaten Mississippi in the New Orleans Sugar Bowl. TECH WILL BE around once again when the top teams in Dixie are picked this year. There will be competition though from the established Southern powers Ala- bama, Tulane, Mississippi, Geor- gia and Tennessee. Tennessee's great coach Gen- eral Bob Neyland has retired after one of the longest and most successful careers in the annals of the sport, but the Volunteers will still be one of the most feared teams in the South .this year. Neyland built his out- stnading record over two de- cades at Knoxville on the strength of sound blocking and tackling. His offense consisted of only a few simple plays, but he imbued his teams with such sound fundamentals that even when the opposition figured out the play, the blocking was so devastating that it worked any- way. , GENERAL NEYLAND'S old al- ma mater West Point is still re- building out of the ashes of the tragic scandal thatrocked the academy two years ago. Earl Blaik will be on top in a few years; he is that kind of coach, but 1953 is still a formative year for the Ca- dets. About all in the way of cheer on The Plain is the memory of the Glenn Davis-Doc Blanchard teams of yesteryear. Elsewhere in the East, Prince- GOLFERS Have fun at the Par ridge Practice Range We furnish clubs and balls -21/ m iles out Washte- now - right on U.S. 23 for 1 mile. ton will be after the Ivy League crown which it relinquished last year to Pennsylvania. The Qua- kers have been forsaken by their sister schools and have gone to the nation at large in the for- mation of their 1953 schedule. Penn will play California, Ohio State, Michigan and Notre Dame among others, and all without the benefit of spring practice, which has fallen out of the good graces of the Ivy League authorities.. The Pacific Coast Conference, still basking in the sunlight of 'its first Rose Bowl triumph over the Big Ten, will have its share of strong teams. Washington's Hus- kies, who will open Michigan's schedule at Ann Arbor, will field a good team, but the real power seems to lie with Lynn Waldorf at the University of California. Al- ways fortunately endowed with a horde of material, the Golden Bears are still snarling after last season's failures, and appear ready to roll. * * * SOUTHERN California and its cross-town rival U.C.L.A. will be right in the middle of the battle for the roses, but at this early juncture it looks as though Pappy Waldorf will be spending another New Year's Day at Pasadena. Three times before he has taken an unbeaten team into the big stadium only to see it humbled by the Big Ten representative. The Coast has at last tasted tri- umph in the Rose Bowl however, and hopes are running high for a repeat this season. The Southwest, the home of forward passing on fourth down, should see another wild struggle for the conference championship and the accompanying Cotton Bowl bid. Last year Texas man- aged to weather the storm un- defeated, one of the few times in recent seasons that a team has gone through the league without losing. It is impossible at this point to pick a winner in the cowboy conference, but the eventual champion must beat Texas. That is the way it generally is in the Southwest. Overall, the season will be one of the most interesting of recent years. A surplus of strong teams should keep most of the conference races in doubt until late November. Perhaps it is too early for a pre- diction, but it should hold that the team which fights to the top of the Big Ten will be a team more than capable of handling any- thing that the Coast puts into the Rose Bowl in the way of opposi- tion. f (Tomorrow: The New Rule and its effect on Football) YE'STERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 10, New York 2 Detroit 9-5, Washington 6-4 Boston 4, Chicago 3 TODAY'S GAMES New York at Detroit (night) Philadelphia at Chicago (night) Boston at St. Louis (2) (twi-night) Washington at Cleveland NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Brooklyn ...........59 32 .648 .. Milwaukee ..........53 37 .589 5% Philadelphia .......50 38 .568 74 New York ..........47 39 .547 9%/ St. Louis ..........49 41 .544 9% Cincinnati .........42 50 .457 17% Chicago ..........31 57 .352 26% Pittsburgh ..........30 67 .309 32 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cincinnati 7, Pittsburgh 0 St. Louis at New York (rain) Chicago at Brooklyn (rain) Milwaukee at Philadelphia (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Pittsburgh (night) Milwaukee at Brooklyn (night) Cincinnati at New York (night) St. Louis at Philadelphia (night) READ DAILY CLASS I FIEDS MR. ALC-IBIADES Your interests are rather pleasing, But not entirely appeasing. Add Gide, Matisse and Machiavelli, We're off on a game of Botticelli -Or were you simply teasing? Bael-Joly Apt. No. 5, 331 Packard (Tonight at 8:30) 161o. U my V..if REAL ESTATE HOMESITES-On Huron River Dr., 5 mi. west Ann Arbor in hilly, Wooded area overlooking Huron River. Write Frank Offer, 1710 Seaborn, Detroit 14, Phone Lorain 7-1495. STT STARTING SATURDAY PRICES THIS ATTRACTION ONLY MATINEE ADULTS 60c NIGHTS 80c - CHILDREN ALL TIMES 35c TONIGHT & TOMORROW NIGHT 8 P.M. Dept. of Speech Presents Odets' New Thriller THIECOUNTRY GIRL. really excellent production . . . more than worth while to take in COUNTRY GIRL this weekend, for the perform- ance is highly entertaining . . ." -Leonard Greenbaum, THE MICHIGAN DAILY $1.20 - 90c - 60c LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE )ve3 W hen youre in 1 o r nn e OPEN EVERY 10 A.M.- 11 DAY P.M. er etion anModemrn oo'n" TODAY & SAT. You'll hear this lilting song sung in Samuel Goldwyn's new musical wonderfilm, and suddenly--you'll. feel nine feet tall! For that's what this enchanting story, this love story, this tender story does to you - as no other film has ever done before. For into his multi-million dollar musical production "Hans Christian Andersen", Samuel Gold- wyn has poured all the emotions of which the human heart is capa- ble and, as each comes into full play, you'll feel yourself glow, grow -till you, too, seem nine feet tall! F NOW PLAYING AT SALINE MILL THEATRE Route 112 at Saline 8 Miles South on Main BERNARD SHAW'S "ARMS AND THE MAN" Performances Every Night but Monday at 8:30 - till Aug. 2 I / Tickets $1.80 Call Saline 31 TONIGHT and Saturday George Raft "OUTPOST in Cihema KS LIui LAST TIMES TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9:15 P.M. HENRY FONDA - OLIVIA DeHAVILLAND in JAMES THURBER'S "THE MALE ANIMAL" EXTRA! TECHN ICOLOR CARTOON FESTIVAL STARTING SATURDAY at 7:00 & 9:30 P.M. Sunday at 8:00 Only Darryl F. Zanuck presents BETTE ANNE GEORGE CELESTE DA'IS -BAXTER SANDERS' Holm SAMUEL GOLDWYN, PRESENTS sns aChri Sti an, and infroducing FARLEY GRANGER - JEANMAIRE Directed by CHARLES VIDOR . Screenplay by MOSS HART Words and Music by FRANK LOESSER Choreography by ROLAND PETIT Distributed by RKO RADIO PICTURES, INC. 2 I BEAT THE HEAT TO THE PUNCH 0 *' MOROCCO" Starting Sunday FIRST SHOWING with * ICE COLD BEER I I