PAGE THERE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I m White Sox Stop Indians; [ajor League Standings. Yanks Lose Minoso's Home Rum Helps Chicago To Defeat Lemon CLASSIFIEDS LOST AND FOUND AMERICAN W New York 73 Chicago 68 Cleveland 62 Boston 73 Washington 55 Philadelphia 46 Detroit 39 St. Louis 38 LEAGUE L Pet. 36 .670 43 .613 47 .569 51 .553 57 .491 64 .418 71 .355 75 .336 GB 6 11 121/ 191/3 27 / 34J/ 37 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 5-3, Detroit 2-9 Washington 2, New York 1 Chicago 6, Cleveland 2 Boston 7-7, Philadelphia 6-5 TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at St. Louis (night) Chicago at Cleveland (night) New York at Washington (night) Boston at Philadelphia (night) NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn Milwaukee Philadelphia St. Louis New York Cincinnati Chicago Pittsburgh * W L 72 37 66 46 60 48 60 48 53 53 49 62 42 65 37 80 * * Pet. .660 .589 .556 .556 .500 .441 .393 .316 GB - / 7 11 112 17 24 29 39 PRO AND AMATEUR WINNERS OF "WORLD" GOLF-Happy winners of four divisions of the Tam O'Shanter "World" golf tournament in Chicago display the trophies they won. Left to right: Frank Stranahan of Toledo, Ohio, men's amateur winner; Lew Worsham of Oakmont, Pa., men's profes- sional winner who received $25,000; Patty Berg of Chicago, women's professional winner who re- ceived $5,000; and Margaret. Smith of Guadalajara, Mexico, women's amateur winner. Worsham sank a spectacular 140-yard approach on the final hole to nose out Chandler Harper. Worsham's 72-hole total was 278, ten under par. GIANTS MAY NOT BE DEAD: Dressen Insult Recalls Terry Episode YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 1, Cincinnati 0 Pittsburgh 7-0, Philadelphia 4-3 Brooklyn 4, New York 0 St. Louis 4, Milwaukee 3 TODAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at New York Cincinnati at Chicago (2) St. Louis at Milwaukee (2) (Twi-. Night) Philadelphia at Pittsburgh (night) Rangers Get New Coach, Bentle yBoys NEW YORK - () - The New York Rangers yesterday acquired the Bentley brothers-Doug and Max-two of the biggest names in hockey. At the same time they annuone- ed that Frank Boucher would coach the team next season. * a * BILL COOK, who had previously been the coach, has resigned. Cook and Boucher were stars with the Rangers in the twenties and thirties when the New York club was one of the powers of the Na- tional Hockey League. The Rangers hoped to restore one of the league's most success- ful brother acts by getting the Bentley boys to join the team. Max was purchased from the To- ronto Maple Leafs for an undis- closed sum, while. Doug, his 38- year-old brother was acquired from New York's Saskatoon farm club of the Western Hockey League, where he had been the player-coach. Boucher, who has been with the Rangers as a player, coach or manager since the club entered the National League in 1926, returns to the dual manager-coach role he filled from February 21, 1946 until December 22, 1948. As a Ranger player, Boucher was named center on the league All-Star team three times and was a seyen-time winner of the Lady Byng Trophy awarded each season to the N.H.L. performer ad- Judged to have shown the best type of sportsmanship. By IVAN N. KAYE Charley Dressen's recent pro- nouncement regarding the state of the New York National League baseball club ("The Giants is dead") brings back memories of another insulting remark made nearly two decades ago by a Gi- ant manager with reference to the Dodgers. It was during the spring tra.M- ing season of 1934 when the Giants under Bill Terry were riding atop the baseball world that a report- er questioned the New York skip- per as to how he thought the Dodgers would finish in the coming season. - * / TERRY SNEERED and spoke the famous sentence which was to haunt him for the rest of his base- ball days: "The Dodgers-are they still in the league?" The comment stirred the fires of animosity in Flatbush to such heights that a move was made to sever all ties with Manhat- tan. True enough, the Bums with their nice-guy manager Casey Sten- gel were in the depths of the sec- and division and were hardly con- tenders for the pennant, but that they were still very much in the league was to be proven to Bill Terry and his over-confident champions ,with disasterous re- sults. ALL SEASON, the Giant-Dodg- er games were marked by their ex- treme ferocity. The excitement reached fever pitch when the Gi- ants invaded Ebbets Field in the final week of the season for a four game series with Stengel's team. The Giants had been faltering all through September and the "Gas House Gang" from St. DID YOU KNOW: that Ty Cobb, the Detroit Tigers' all-time dia- mond hero had a lifetime batting average of .367? Cobb amassed his great mark over the course of 24 seasons of major league baseball. Most experts rate him the greatest player of all time. Louis with Dizzy and Paul Dean were closing with a tremendous rush that threatened to catch the New Yorkers if they did not take care of the seventh-place Dodgers. What happened during those four fateful days in Brooklyn turn- ed a gloomy community, which had been forced to watch their beloved Bums, stagger to a dismal seventh place finish, into the wildest base- ball town in the nation. * * * STENGEL became the hero of heroes, and even the humiliation wrought upon the present-day Dodgers by his mighty Yankees could never shake "Ol' Case" from the hearts of the Brooklyn faitnful. The Dodgers battered the Gi- ants four times, and just to make Terry's agony complete, the Car- dinal rode roughshod over Chi- cago to sweep to the flag. The Giants had suffered one of the greatest collapses in baseball history, and it was the maligned Bums from across the river who had the pleasure of nailing shut Bill Terry's baseball coffin. Stengel moved on to Boston in later years, and still finished last or thereabouts as Leo Durocher said nice guys always do, but the time was not far off when he would be riding at the top of the rival league, and threatening as he is this season to become the first manager in history to win five straight championships. IN FACT, Stengel hasn't finish- ed anything but first in the Amer- ican League. But back in 1934 it was a different story and a vic- tory for the Dodgers usually came sandwiched between defeats, ex- cept fr that last series with the Giants; and Brooklyn fans re- member only those games and for- get all the defeats. Right now it doesn't look as though any team can beat the Dodgers to the pennant, but it should be remembered that Bill Terry's Giants were also seem- ingly unbeatable in '34 and they wound up listening to the World Series instead of playing in it. Durocher's Giants are not going anywhere this season, but Dres- sen's comment emblazened on their locker room door for all to see should make them just about the toughest team in the league for Brooklyn to handle. By the Associated Press CLEVELAND-Minnie Minoso's three-run homer featured a five- run uprising in the seventh inn- ing last night. as the Chicago White Sox drove Bob Lemon from the box and scored a 6-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians. The White Sox victory enabled them to gain a full game on the league leading New York Yankees who lost to Washington 2-1. The Sox are now six games from first place. R f THE INDIANS loaded the bases with none out in the ninth inn- ing, but Billy Pierce was sum- moned from the bullpen and pre- vented them from scoring by re- tiring three straight. He struck out La~ry Doby, retired Al Rosen on a pop fly and Wally Westlake on a pop foul. Minoso, who collected three of Chicago's 12 hits, doubled in the first inning and scored on Sam Mele's two bagger. Connie Johnson then held a 1-0 lead until the fifth when Lemon doubled a run across for Cleve- land. A single by Chico Carrasquel, a pinch double by Tom Wright, a single by Bob Boyd and a walk to Nellie Fox preceded Minoso's 14th homer in the seventh. * * * SENATORS 2, YANKEES 1, WASHINGTON-Walt Master- son choked off a ninth inning New York rally last night with some spectacular clutch pitching that gave the Washington Sena- tors a squeaky 2-1 decision over the league leaders. Hank Bauer got to third with nobody out but he got no further as Masterson fanned two Yanks and got a third on a liner. THE VICTORY was Washing- ton's sixth in its last seven and the fourth straight Senator victory over the Yankees at Griffith Sta- dium. A crowd of 19,793 watched the Senators take the lead off rookie Bill Miller in the first and hang on through a series of late inn- ing New York rallies. Consecutive singles by Mickey Vernon, Keith Thomas and Clyde Vollmer, all after two men had been retired, gave Washington its first inning counter. The deciding run scored in the fourth on a double by Wayne Terwilliger and a single by rookie catcher Frank Sacka. The Yanks got their run in the seventh on a walk to Bauer and a triple by Irv Noren. BROWNS 5-3, TIGERS 2-9 ST. LOUIS - Scoring four runs in the first inning, mainly on the strength of Don Lund's three-run home run, the Detroit Tigers de- feated the St. Louis Browns, 9-3, in the second half of a twi-night doubleheader last night after the Browns had taken the first game, 5-2. A three run homer also was the big blow .of the Browns' victory with Don Lenhardt doing the job after two were out in the eighth inning. * * * VETERAN VERN Stephens ac- counted for two of the Browns' runs in the second game, hitting his third home run with a mate on base in the first inning. Ike Boone's 18th homer of the season - and sixth of the year against the Browns-put the Tigers ahead, 2-1, in 'the sixth inning of the first game. Roy Sievers pulled the Browns even again in their half of the inning by touching losing pitcher Billy Hoeft for his seventh home run of the season. * * * PIRATES 7-0, PHILLIES 4-3 PITTSBURGH-Southpaw Curt Simmons blanked Pittsburgh 3-0 on six hits-all of them singles-- last night after the Pirates whip- ped the Philadelphia Phillies 7-4 in a suspended game preceding the regular contest. Del Ennis' bases-loaded fly ball and Granny Hamner's triple with two aboard accounted for all of the Phillie runs in the third. SIMMONS ran into trouble in the first inning, allowing three singles but the Phillies saved the shutout for the 24-year-old left- hander by executing a double play to nip a run at the plate. In the suspended contest, the Pi- rates scored all seven runs on July 5 and that was all they needed to give rookie Jim Waugh his second victory of the season against three defeats, although he needed help from Paul LaPalme in the ninth. CUBS 1, REDLEGS 0 CHICAGO - Paul Minner held Cincinnati to three scattered hits yesterday to give the Cubs a 1-0 triumph over the Redlegs in the first game of a four-game series. Minner yielded just three scat- tered singles and one walk in post- ing his eighth win-and the Cubs' first shutout success since Bob Rush blanked the Braves in Mil- waukee May 9. * * * JACKIE COLLUM, the Redleg's short southpaw, suffered his sev- enth setback as one of his four walks set the stage for the game's only run. Eddie Miksis walked with one out in the second, and moved to second on Clyde McCullough's infield scratch single.'Hal Jeff- coat then followed with a line single to left, Miksis scoring. Collum was tagged for six hits as Chicago cashed its seventh safe- ty off Bud Podbielan who pitch- ed the eighth after Jackie was side-tracked for a pinch batter in the Redleg's seventh straight loss. Miss America To Welcome J. C. Golfers Neva Jane Langley of Georgia, Miss America of 1953, will be in Ann Arbor for the Eighth Inter- national Jaycee Junior Golf Tour- nament which begins on the Uni- versity course over the weekend. She will welcome over 200 of the best junior golfers from 37 states, Hawaii, Canada and the Canal Zone. The tournament is sponsored by the United States Junior Cham- ber of Commerce. Practice rounds at the Michigan course are scheduled for Saturday and Sunday. Eighteen hole qualifying rounds will be played by the entire field on Monday and Tuesday. Then the best 100 scorers will be allowed to continue in four days of play to determine the tournament champ in 72 holes of medal play. The tournament will culminate with an awards ceremony at the Michigan course. The Jaycee Junior Champion and state team and other awards will be made. LOST - Monday, Argus FA camera in ground floor Haven Hall restroom. Undeveloped pictures valuable me- mentos. Reward. Call 2-2707, Virginia Rock. 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. One 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, $2.50 each. Phone 2-9020. MUSIC AMPLIFIER and public address system in portable leatherette case. New, only two available. Excellent for high quality music reproduction. Complete with speaker, $49.95. A. A. -Radio & T.V. 1215 So. University. Ph. 7942. BIKE-Used girls 3-speed Raleigh. Call 2-8885 after 5 p.m. 'MOHAWK balloon tire bike (girls). Call Nancy Church, Alice Lloyd Hall. 1941 PLYMOUTH CLUB COUPE - Very good appearance inside and out. Mechanically reliable. Have new car. Phone 3-5915 or visit after 4 p.m. at 517 E. Washington, Apt. 4. VACUUM CLEANER. 11 month old Jet- 99 Universal tank-type. Exactly like new (not even scratched). $40 or less than half new price. 832 So. Main St. FOR RENT DELUXE Bachelor Apt. Private entrance. Semi-private bath. Between Ypsi &nd Ann Arbor. $67.50 a month. Ph. 2-9020. ACCOMMODATIONS for Fall are avail- able for men students now in large double rooms in house 5 minutes from campus. Call 3-0849, 406 Packard APARTMENTS, roomettes, or rooms by day or week for campus visitors. Campus Tourist Homes, 518 E. Wil- 11am St. Phone 3-8454. 3 CAMPUS APARTMENTS -Furnished for groups of three or four girls. To begin Sept. 15. Inquire 518 E. William St. FREE LIVING ACCOMMODATIONS - For couple in exchange for 2 hours of housework daily. Near campus. Ph. 3-8454. PERSONAL ZE LAST TIME to save millions by sub- scribing at special student summer rates to Time, Life, US News, Sat. Eve. Post, et al. Phone Student Periodical Agency, 6007, to order or to inquire. TRANSPORTATION DRIVING to Toronto and Kingston August 14. Can take three passengers. Returning August 17. Call 2-5180 after 5:00 p.m. WANTED-Ride to Urbana, Illinois Sat- urday. Phone 3-8859 evenings. HELP WANTED WANTED-Taxi cab drivers, full or part time. Yellow and Checker Cab Co. 113 S. Ashley. Ph. 9382. MAKE $20.00 DAILY - Sell luminous name plates. Write Reeves Co., Attle- boro, Mass., Free Sample and details. HELP WANTED WANTED-Dental hygienist or assistant. No experience necessary. Write Dr A. E. Van Ornum, 821 Penniman Ave. Plymouth, Mich., or call 1004 afte August 17th. BUSINESS SERVICES WASHING, Finished Work, and Hand Ironing. Cotton dresses a specialty. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also iron- ing separately. Free pick-up and de- livery. Phone 2-9020. 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 Price ANN ARBOR RADIO & T.V. 1215 So. University Ph. 7942 TYPING - Reasonable rates, accurate and efficient. Ph. 7590. 830 S. Main. WANTED TO BUY SINGLE BREASTED White Dinner Jack- ets. Sizes 36 and 40. Phone 3-2962 after 4 p.m. WANTED TO RENT AIR FORCE officer, wife, & cocker span- iel desire to rent or lease 2 or 3 bed- room home for 2 years, preferably suburb or semi-rural location. Daily Box 24. YOUNG COUPLE seeking 2 or 3 rooms. Husband law school student, wife school teacher, no children, no pets. Daily Box 16. STARTING TODAY WHEN ONE MAN- DARED THE TERROR i SPORTS TRAIL: ors ham's Tam O'Shanter Shot Called Best in History By WILL GRIMSLEY NEW YORK-(I)-It probably will be many more years-if ever --before golf is able to produce a dramatic climax to match Lew Worsham's eagle deuce on the fi- nal hole last Sunday which won him Tam O'Shanter's $25,000 pot of gold. Did you see it? Many thousands, perhaps millions, did. It was beam- ed right into our living rooms by television. That made the feat all the more dramatic. THE NEXT DAY in busy New York, where chief interest centers on the welfare of the Yank6es, Giants or Dodgers, non-golf-mind- ed citizens were punching friends with their elbows and saying ex- citedly: "Did you see that finish? Gosh, what a shot!" You had to have the setting to get the real bang out of the blow, conceded to be perhaps the great- est finishing shot of all time. WORSHAM was the last man on the course and just in front of him a Virginian by the name of Chandler Harper had scored a birdie three for a score of 279, nine under par. Worsham was on No. 17 at the time and it meant he must get two birdies to tie or play the last two holes in three under par to win. He canned his birdie on No. 17 and then, with the cam- eras trained on him trudged up the 18th fairway. From the fairway of the 410- yard final hole he chose a wedge to make his 140-yard "do or die" second shot. The ball landed on the green and trickled into the cup. HENRY H. STEVENS, Inc. L.ONG DISTANCE4r: .f MOVING Flint, MichiganS 86 tes. Bill Stevens Lit. '40 Mandgr Phone Flint Collect 4-168 For Lower Interstate Ra We own, operate and schedule our own fleet of vans for direct service without transfer. U PLEASE We would hate to have to disappoint you at the door - MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS Washington's Porterfield Tops Pitchers with Eight Shutouts N C1 * * OW PLAYING N THE DRAMA RAMA STAGE Ik - A -I 11 er ection in. lodern Cooling HELD OVER The Tops in TECH N ICOLOR MUSICALS! M-G-M's WORSHAM was Tam O'Shauter champion with a $25,000 prize by one stroke. Fred Corcoran, the walking sports encyclopedia who serves as promotional director for the PGA tournament bureau, saw the shot. He said it was the all- time climax of golf. "There have been many brilliant and important shots in golf," Cor- coran said, "but certainly none made under these circumstances, with such a rich prize and with such a vast audience-and by a man playing last in the field. "OF COURSE, there's Gene Sar- azen's double eagle in the Masters in 1935 which ultimately gave him the championship. But it was on the 15th hole, a 240-yard spoon shot. "And once in Britain Walter Hagen needed an eagle two on the final hole to tie Bob Jones. With a grand flourish, he sent EARLY FOR II OSCAR WILDE'S 8i/LeJmporlance NEW YORK - (A') - Bob Por- terfield, ace Washington right- hander, has pitched eight shutouts this season but still can't seem to shake the hard luck that has dog- ged him throughout his career. The oft-injured Virginian hit rock-bottom last year when he lost seven games by shutouts, three by scores of 1-0. SOMEHOW he has managed to escape being shut out this year but Lady Luck still refuses to smile upon him. Four times in his career-- twice this season -Porterfield has come within one blow of pitching a no-hitter. He is be- ginning to think he'll never achieve his goal of hurling a no- hitter. Although only 10 pitchers in American League history have top- ped Porterfield's eight shutouts for one season, Bob finds him- self far away from setting a club against every team in the league. Thus far he has blanked every club except Detroit. Only Christy Mathewson and Grover Cleveland Alexander, of the National League, have been able to blank all opposing seven clubs. * * * WHEN Jack oombs of the 1910 Philadelphia Athletics set the American League record of 13 shutouts in one season, he blanked every team but Detroit. The most one-hitters pitched in a lifetime is 10 by Bob Fel- ler. The 29-year-old Porterfield, with three straight shutouts and 29 consecutive scoreless innings, has an earned run average of 3.51. His won-lost record with the fifth- place Senators is 14-9. I rA gi'ie' g Im I 8 :30 Every Night But Monday 1 greatest since its famed hit "An American in Paris"! ANGEL STREET Formerly "GASLIGHT" A VICTORIAN THRILLER IN THREE ACTS BY PATRICK HAMILTON AUG. 4 to AUG. 16 TICKETS $1.80 Call Saline 31 r o Li tn M-G-M's "THE BAND WAGON" Technicolor Musical Starring r 0 M- - 0 Noun M' V.- ii M !/ IF lwPupvwwww I I -I