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June 27, 1953 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1953-06-27

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SATUR 'N', JUNE 27, 1953

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PA(;Z TIMER

PAGE TflRER

Tdi ns(Doby Lemon) Upend Yanks;
0-~-% A~ -

[CLASSIFIEDS

F~rteen

Giant

ts

ur y

Ch i cago

C>

* *

* * *

Tribe Now Trails by Eight;
Tigers Claw Senators, 7-4

Cards' Miller Blanks Phils;
Reds Throttle Pirates, 8-4

By The Associated Press
NEW YORK-The second place
Cleveland Indians scored their
first victory of the season over
the New York Yankees, 7-2, last
night and cut the Yanks' league
lead to eight games.
Larry Doby hit two home runs
for the Indians as the New York-
ers suffered their fifth straight
loss.
* * *
RIGHTHANDER Bob Lemon
spun a brilliant five hitter, hold-
ing the world champions score-
less until two were out in the
ninth. The only New York runs
came when pinchhitter Johnny
Mize hit a home run with Don
Bollwew on base.
''The Indians jumped in front
in the first inning with four un-
earned runs and Lemon never
gave the New Yorkers a chance
to catch up. He walked two and
struck out four.
Vic Raschi was the loser. The
line score:
Cleveland 401 020 000-7 8 0
New York 000 000 002-2 5 3
Lemon and Ginsberg; Raschi, Mc-
Donald (9) and Berra
L-Raschi
HRs: Cleveland-Doby (2), New
York-Mize
y* * *
ATHLETICS 6, BROWNS 5
PHILADELPHIA - Gus Zernial
singled with the bases loaded and
two out in the last of the ninth
to send home two runs and give
the Philadelphia Athletics a 6-5
victory over the St. Louis Browns
at Connie Mack Stadium last
night.
* Zernial's clutch hit made a
losing pitcher of Satchel Paige,
who was making his 33rd relief
appearance of the season. It
'also ended a four game St. Louis
winning streak.
Morris Martin, the third Phila-
delphia pitcher, gained his fourth
win against six defeats, while
Paige went down to his fourth
loss. Old Satch has won once.
The line score:
St. Louis 000 300 200--5 10 1
Philadelphia 001 010 202-6 14 0
Holloman, Paige (7) and Moss;
Kellner, Newson (8), Martin (8)
and Astroth
W-Martin; L-Paige
DETROIT 7, WASHINGTON 3
WASHINGTON - The Detroit'
Tigers shelled Johnny Schmitz for

five runs in the fifth inning to
grab a 7-0 lead and coasted to a
7-3 victory over Washington last
night.
Clyde Vollmer smashed a three-
run homer for the Senators, who
have lost six straight games. The
line score:

By The Associated Press
CHICAGO-Monte Irvin drove
in four runs with a pair of doubles
yesterday as the New York Giants
beat the Chicago Cubs, 9 to 6, on
14 hits for their sixth victory in
eight games with the Cubs.
Rookie Rueben Gomez, though
he went only 623 innings, was
credited with his fourth victory
against three defeats. Hoyt Wil-
helm worked the last 21/3 innings
and held the Cubs scoreless.
THE CHICAGO starter, Bubba
Church, was charged with his
fourth defeat against four vic-

Detroit
Washington

010 150 000-7 12 0
000 003 000-3 7 1

Gray, Herbert (6) and Batts;t
Schmitz, Moreno (5), Stobbs >
(6) and Oldis
W--Gray; I-Schmitz
HR: Washington-Vollmer

JOHNNY MIZE TED KLUSZEWSKI
... pinch hit homer ... smashes number 20

ALL SORTS OF SPORTS:
Larsen, Rosewall Advance in Wimbledon Tennis

By The Associated Press
WIMBLEDON, England - An
impressive fourth-round victory
by America's Art Larsen and a
narrow escape by Australia's top-
seeded Ken Rosewall provided the
tennis excitement at historic
Wimbledon yesterday.
Larsen, a pint-sized left-hander
from San Leandro, Calif., who
won the United States champion-
Gardner Sold
BOSTON - ( -) -- Boston
purchased Cal Gardner from
the Chicago Black Hawks in
the National Hockey League
Friday.
Gardner, 28, can play either
center or left wing. This will,
be his eighth year in the league.
ship in 1950, marched into the
quarter finals of the All-England
tournament with a business-like
8-6, 6-2, 6-0 verdict over Torsten
Johansson. * * *

tory was given over to turning out
mixed, men's and women's doubles
matches.
S* * *
MAUREEN Connolly, defending
women's champion and heavy fa-
vorite to repeat, ( didn't have a
singles assignment. But she played
both mixed and women's doubles,
and survived each.
Little Mo teamed with Julie
Sampson, of Pasadena, Calif., in
women's doubles to beat a South
African duo of A. I. Bilse and J.
M. Scott in the second round, 6-4,
6-0.
Then she and Australia's
Mervyn Rose won a third-round
double match from Narath Ku-
mar, of India, and Mrs. S. H.
Hammersley, of Britain, 6-4,
6-4.
The first fracture in women's
seeded ranks occurred when Mrs.
Susan Partridge Chatrier, of
France, No. 7, bowed to Mrs.
Heather Brewer, of Bermuda, 7-5,
6-3.
DOUBLES matches followed
form with the top-ranked men's
teams scoring easy victories.
The No. 1 seeded tandem of
Rosewall and Hoad ousted Josip
Palada and V. Petrovic, of Yugo-
slavia, 6-2, 6-2, 6-4, in the second
round.
Mulloy and Seixas-No. 2-
became the first men's doubles
teams to advance into quarter-
finals when they defeated Felic-
isimo Ampon and Raymundo
Deyro, of the Philippines, 6-3,
6-3, 6-2.
Jaroslav Drobny and Budge
Patty defeated Jack Arkinstall and
and Berry Green, of Australia,
6-3, 7-9, 6-4, 6-2, in the second
round.

CLEVELAND - Sam Snead's
aching left hand may get some
surgical attention this summer or
fall, he said yesterday.
"I'm not planning on any sur-
gery on my hand right now," he
told a reported. "I may wait until
after the Tam O'Shanter in Chi-
cago (July 30-Aug. 2), but I'll
probably wait until after I get
back in October from the ryder cup
matches."
The White Sulphur Springs, W.
Va., golfer recently re-injured his
hand while golfing, where there
had been an old break in a small
bone.
* * *
WELLINGTON, Kan. - Dick
Wiersma of Sanborn, Ia., thought
his line was snagged, as he fished
in Lake Wellington yesterday.
As a tugged and pulled his
"catch" into shallow water, his
line broke.
Wading in, Wiersma recov-
ered a minnow bucket-with a
27-inch, seven-pound blue chan-
nel catfish wedged by the head
inside.
The Iowan worked several min-
utes to pry loose the fish.
* * *
CLEVELAND - Curley - haired
Jack Burke Jr., of Kiamesha
Lake, N.Y., held a three-stroke
lead yesterday at the half-way
mark in the 72-hole $15,000 Ma-
nakiki Golf Tournament.
The former Texan, recovering
froman attack of influenza which
soared his temperature to 103
while he was winning last week's
Inverness meet at Toledo, said he
was "too weak to hit the ball far
enough to get into trouble."
HE TACKED a 67, five under,
par, to his opening 66 Friday for
a 133 total.

The former Texan moved out
front despite some fancy shoot-
ing by the rest of the field-top
feature of which was a course-
record 33-31-64 over the par.
36-36-72 layout by 25-year-old
Leo Biagetti of Baltimore, Md.
That sterling job rammed the
former Sandusky, O., youngster
into a three-way tie for second at
Tielevise (classic
CHICAGO - (A) - The $155,
000 Arlington Classic, richest of
all races for 3-year-old horses,
will be televised July 18.
The race, top feature of the
Arlington Park program, will be
carried on the CBS television
network.
Arrangements for the telecast
were announced Friday by Ben
Lindheimer, executive director
of Arlington Park, and Leslie
Atlass, vice president of the
CBS Central Division.
136 with Ellsworth Vines, the for-
mer tennis champ from Los An-
geles, and Ted Kroll of New Hart-
ford, N.Y.
* * *
ROCHESTER, N.Y. - Sharp-
shooting Patty Berg fired her sec-
ond sub-par round of the United
States Women's Open Golf Cham-
pionship yesterday, a one-under
73 on top of Thursday's record 71,
to strengthen her lead in the title
quest.
* * *
SYRACUSE, N.Y. - Davis Cup-
per Hamilton Richardson's col-
legiate record of never losing a
singles set was still intact yester-
day in the NCAA tennis tourna-
ment.
The Tulane sophomore had an
easy time whipping John Ricksen
of California, 6-1, 6-2, in the 90-
degree temperature yesterday at
the Syracuse University courts.

tories and needed relief from Turk
Lown, Dutch Leonard and Shel-
don Jones.
The Giants scored all their
runs in three innings. Four came
in the third on an error by Ed-
die Miksis, singles by Alvin
Dark, Hank Thompson and Bob-
by Thompson and Irvin's first
double.
Wes Westrum's fifth homer and
walks to Whitey Lockman and
Hank Thompson ahead of Irvin's
second double scored three mark-
ers in the sixth.
* * *
CARDS 7, PHILS 0
ST. LOUIS-Stan Musial, con-
tinuing his sensational slugging,
backed Stu Miller's three-hit
pitching last night with two hom-
ers and a double to drive in five
runs as the St. Louis Cardinals re-
placed Philadelphia in the Nation-
al League's third place by beating
the Phillies, 7-0.
Miller, previously unimpressive
this year, needed little help as
he gained his second victory
against three defeats.
Steve Ridzik, young Philadelphia
righthander, was charged with the
defeat, his third in six decisions,
after yielding four runs in the
first three innings.
The line score:
Philadelphia .000 000 000-0 3 0
St. Louis . . .103 000 21x-7 7 1
Ridzik, Peterson (4), Kipper (8)
and Burgess; Miller and Yvars (L-
Ridzik)
HRS: St. Louis-Musial 2, Ja-
blonski.
* * *
REDS 8-4, PIRATES 4-1
CINCINNATI-Broad-shoulder-
ed Ted Kluszewski took the lead
in the National League home run
derby last night, swatting his 20th
and 21st as the Cincinnati Red-
legs twice downed. the Pittsburgh
Pirates, 8-4, 4-1, in a twilight-
night doubleheader.
Gus Bell whacked his 17th In
the nightcap as half-point Lefty
Jackie Collum let the Bucs down
on four singles.
Redleg Andy Seminick and
Frank Thomas of the Pirates also
homered in the last game.
The line scores:
(First Game)
Pittsburgh ..100 100 101-4 8 1
Cincinnati . .000 305 00x-8 10 2
Dickson, Schultz(6), Bowman
(8) and Janowicz; Nuxhall, King
(8) and Seminick.
W-Nuxhall; L-Dickson.
HRS: Cincinnati - Kluszewski,
Seminick; Pittsburgh-Thomas.
(2nd Game)
Pittsburgh .. .000 010 000-1 4 1
Cincinnati ...000 202 00x-4 5 1
LaPalme and Sandlock; Collum
and Seminick.
HRS: Cincinnati-Bell, Klus-
zewski.

MICHIGAN, DAILY
Phone 23-24-1.
HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS
2 .60 1.34 1.96
3 .70 1.78 2.84
Fiur4 .90 2.24 3.92
Figure 5 average words to a line.
Classified deadline doily except
Saturday is 3 P.M., Saturdays,
11:30 A.M., for Sunday issue.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-Ring with eight keys, seahorse
on tag. Ph. Univ. Ext. 569, 9 to 5,
or 2-2274. Reward.
LOST-Grey flannel suit coat. Rabi-
deau-Harris label. Call 2-4624.,
LOST-Men's gold wrist watchr(Sante
Fe). Big reward. Call Detroit TR.
4-3538.
FOR SALE
CANARIES - Beautiful singers & fe-
males. Parakeets $7 and up. Mrs.
Ruffins, 62 S. Seventh. )123F
ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords $6.98. Sox,
39c; Shorts, 69c; Military Supplies.
Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington.
'53 VOLKSWAGEN - German peoples'
car, $150 below cost. '48 English
Thames, small panel truck, $200 total.
Ph. European Products, 2-9780.
TROPICAL FISH at lowest prices in
town. Tanks, pumps. filters. See Lar-
ry Thomas at 813 E. Huron St., base-
ment rear in early afternoon.
4x5 SYNCH. PRESS CAMERA - Flash
gun, case, cut film holders, coupled
range finder. Also 4x5 Solar enlarger,
F4.5 lens. Both like new. Must sacri-
fice. Phone 2-3245.
REFRIGERATOR, electric stove, 8mm
movie camera, shotgun. All in excel-
lent condition. Ph. 2-3245.
FOR RENT
LARGE, COOL double rooms and one
single room available for ma]le stu-
dents in house 5 minutes from cam-
pus. Ice box privileges. Call 3-0849.
ROOMS FOR RENT
ROOMS, Roomettes and Apartments by
day or week for campus visitors. -
Campus Tourist Homes, 518 E. Wil-
liam. Phone 3-8454.
VERY ATTRACTIVE Furnished Apart-
ment near campus for 3 girls. Two
bedrooms and two baths. Long-term
rental only. References required. Call
7380.
ROOM AND BOARD
ROOM AND MEALS or meals only. Good
food. On campus. 1319 Hill. Ph.
2-6422.

ROOM AND BOARD
watTRAVEL
Wanatrip abroad without leaving
Ann Arbor. Live or board at Nelson
International House, 915 Oakland,
Phone 3-8506.
PERSONAL
KENNETH N. WESTERMAN-Teacher of
singing and speech, has summer
schedule vacancies. Phone 6584, 715
Granger.
SUMMER STUDENTS-Plan your own
course of piano lessons with fine pri-
vate teacher; brush-up series for ed-
ucation students; fundamentals for
beginners; repertoire and technique
for the advanced pianist. Ph. 2-3541.
MISCELLANEOUS
WOULD YOU LIKE to be reading Time
for 6c-the price of a newspaper?
Phone Student Periodical, 6007.
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.
HOME TYPING SERVICE-Reasonable
rates. Call Mrs. Conner, 2-7605.
RADIOS - PHONOS
New and used and all guaranteed.
Phono needles - portable batteries.
We repair all types of radios, phonos,
and T. V.
Summer Special
Phono Jack and switch installed free
in your radio with purchase of V.M.
Triomatic Changer Attachment.
ANN ARBOR RADIO & TV
"Student Service"
1215 So. Univ., Ph. 7942'
111 blocks east of East Eng.
TYPING - Reasonable rates, accurate
and efficient. Ph. 7590. 830 S. Main.
EXPERT TYPIST - Rates reasonable,
Prompt service. 914 Mary Street.
3-4449.

READ
AND
USE
DAILY
CLASS IFI EDS

LATE SHOW TONIGHT
Starting at 12 Midnight
"BEWARE
MY LOVELY"
with
[da Lupino, Robert Ryan
and
"CRIPPLE CREEK"
In Color
Extra-3 Stooge Comedy
STARTING SUNDAY
"THE RED PONY"
In Color
With ROBERT MITCHUM
and
"MONKEY
BUSINESS"
MARILYN MONROE
and CARY GRANT

i
j
t
j
3
j
a
I,
R

HE THUS became the first
American to reach the roundrof
eight. Hugh Stewart, the young
upsetter from Los Angeles, failed
in his try and the other Ameri-
can survivors - Vic Seixas and
Gardnar Mulloy-won't get their
chances until Saturday.
Stewart, 1952 United States
college champion and first-
round conqueror of Britain's
Tony Mottram, couldn't match
the stroking finesse ofsAustra-
lia's 18-year-old Lewis Head,
and he went down, 6-0, 6-3, 6-2.
The other half of Australia's
"Fuzz Kid" tandem-No. 1 rankedj
Rosewall-set the center court'
stands buzzing when he lost the
first two sets of his match to Jack
Arkinstall, a 31-year-tld Austra-
lian free lancer, who is virtually
unknown in tennis circles.
While the crowd of 15,000 moved
to the edge of their seats in antic-
ipation of one of the most stag-
gering upsets in years, the casual
Aussie favorite harnessed his wild
game and proceeded to rack up
three sets in a row. He won, 4-6,
3-6, 6-1, 6-1, 6-2.
ROSEWALL may have been toy-
ing or he simply may have been
off, At any rate, his erratic per-
formance left the tongues of the
experts wagging and there were
free predictions that Head, not
Rosewall, is the lad to beat for the
men's championship.
In the first two sets, the No. 1
favorite couldn't hit a net post
with a base fiddle. He netted fore-
hand shots repeatedly and looked
miserable in almost every depart-
ment of play.
But once he got on top of
his g,?me, he breezed through
his opponent like a real cham-
pion. The last three sets required
only 45 minutes.
By Wimbledon standards the
day was slack. Only five men's
singles matches were played while
most of the 16,court tennis fac-

TENNIS PLAYERS!
The
ANN ARBOR TENNIS CLUB
invites you to play on
the Varsity Courts at Ferry Field
(10:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. Daily)
Rates: 50c per day
or $9.00 for a Summer Session membership.

h

I LATE SHOW TONIGHT 11 P.M.

1

r

II

11

Major; League Standings
4

ETr«TE

TODAY
Matinees 50c
Eyes. & Sun. 70c

A

AMERICAN
W
New York 46
Cleveland 38;
Chicago 39
Boston 37
Washington 32;
Philadelphia 31
St. Louis 24
Detroit 19

LEAGUE
L Pet.
18 .719
26 .603
28 .582
32 .536
35 .478
36 .463
45 .348
46 .292

GB
81
8
11/2
151,
16'/
241/
27%/

NATIONAL
Milwaukee* 41
Brooklyn* 39
St. Louis 38
Philadelphia 35
New York 34
Cincinnati 26
Pittsburgh 24
Chicago 20

LEAGUE
L Pct.
23 .641
25 .609
26 .594
25 .583
31 .523
37 .413
47 .338
43 .323

GB
2
3
4
7
141
20
20

Em, 0

Prices for this 3-D Attraction
Matinees .......70c
Eyes. & Sun......98c

The screen's greatest. ,. the desert's mightiest'
MUSICAL ADVENTURE!
1 II

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Philadelphia 6, St. Louis 5, night
Detroit 7, Washington 3
Cleveland 7, New York 2
Chicago 5, Boston 3
TODAY'S GAMES
Detroit at Washington (night)
Cleveland at New York
'Chicago at Boston
St. Louis at Philadelphia

*Does not include last night's game
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York, 9, Chicago 6
St. Louis 7, Philadelphia 0
Cincinnati 8, Pittsburgh 4
Cincinnati 4, Pittsburgh 1
TODAY'S GAMES
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
New York at Chicago
Brooklyn at Milwaukee (night)
Philadelphia at St. Louis (2)

NEW SOUND - NEW SCREEN - NEW PROJECTION
Complete New Show Tonight
at 7:00 and 9:00 P.M.
and Sunday ot 8:00 P.M. Only

A

Typewriters, Calculators
Adding Machines
RENTED, Sold, Repaired
Typewriter repair work a specialty.
Fountain Pens, repaired by
factory trained men.
Don't accept an old style typewriter
rental! We can supply late model
machines.
82.50 plus taxes MO RL 'S77
Sne198314 S. State St. Phone

MARLENE
DIETRICH

0,d

JOHN
WAYNE

In a Riotous, Bawdy Satire of the South Sea Isles
"SEVEN SINNERS"
A Joe Pasternak Production
with Broderick Crawford, Mischa Auer

I

Ill r% I A L II ki t_ II11Iu-~iw~ l l

I

I EW 'All ' ',A I W IW f Al 7 OW M I

HIM

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