THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TTflE ., Gray Six-Hitter Stops Cleveland, 4-21 CLASSIFIEDS ..__ _ FOURTH ON TAP: Three Leagues Started In Summer Softball Play Bosox Deal Slumping Yanks Ninth Straight Setback, 4-0 LEAGUE ONE Ohemisry A ...... 1 01 Social Psychology. .0 0 Economics.......0 0. U. Hospital Doctors 0 0 Willow Run Jokers 0 1 LEAGUE TWO 1.000 .000 .000 .000 .000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 . ' /2 1I2 12 1 12 1 1 Pharmacy........t1 Pharmacology ... .1 Willow Run Digits 0 Chemistry B ......0 Wolverines.,;.....0 0 0 0 1 1 l one, down the Willow Run Jokers, 15-7, Pharmacy edge out the Wol- verines, 12-10, and Pharmacology maul the Chemistry B Team, 14-5. Dave's Boys hung up their first win of the season last night with a 14-7 trouncing of Phi Delta Phi. Aged Earl Risky handled the mound duties for Dave's Boys while Bob Dixon starred at the plate for the winners, smashing a three-run homer. Other games last night saw the Air Force drub Psychology, 13-8, and Fletcher triumph over Hay- den, 9-4.# Tonight's encounters pit Chem- istry A against Economics in League One, the U Hospital Doc- tors against Social Psychology in the initial clash of the summer for both teams, Pharmacy vs. Chemistry B, while the Willow Run Digits meet Pharmacology. LEAGUE FOUR Daves Boys . ......1 0 1.000 . . Air Force , ........1 0 1.000 Senior Medics ....0 0 .000 1 Phi Delta Phi .....0 1 .000 1 Psychology .......0 1 .000 1 * *.* Three of the four summer intra- mural' softball leagues have al- ready swung into action this week with a fourth league scheduled to get underway next week. TUESDAY NIGHT'S activity saw Chemistry A, leader of league All-Stars CHICAGO-P)-The nation- wide poll to select the starting lineups for the July 14 All-Star game at Cincinnati will near a close today with almost 21/ 7 million votes cast. The balloting to name the National and American League teams which started June 12 will close at midnight Friday. The Chicago Tribune, clearing house for the poll, reported 2,340,782 votes have been tab- ulated. WILLIAMS PACKS-Marine Captain Ted Williams, former Bos- ton Red Sox outfielder, packs his flying clothes into a footlocker at the First Marine Air Wing base somewhere in Korea. He is scheduled to return to the United States for treatment of an ear ailment which grounded him after 39 missions over North Korea. OPENING ROUND: Vic Ghezzi Fires 66 To Lead PGA G------ BIRMINGHAM-(VP)-Vic Ghez- zi fired a near-perfect, five-under- par 66, tying a 20-year-old course record, yesterday to lead the first round qualifying in the profession- al Golfers Association tournament. The 6-foot-2, 200-pound pro from Inwood, NY., 1941 champion, missed only one fairway-the 18th -as he whipped around the tight, par 36-35-71 Birmingham Coun- try Club in 34-32. * *. * THE COURSE record was set by Al Watrous 20 years ago. Ghezzi's sparkling round snatched a few brief moments of glory from two rank outsiders- graying, 48 - year - old Jimmy Hines of Glenview, Ill., and Jim Browning of Weston, Mass., who posted 67's within 10 minutes of each other in the mid-afternoon. Then followed, tied at 68, two Sharp- shooting Southerners - Chandler Harper, home profes- sional from Portsmouth, Va., and Johnny Palmer, from Badin, N. C. T.pese first day leaders played in semi-privacy while a crowd estimated at 5,000 dogged the heels of favorites Sam Snead and Cary Middlecoff and the de- fending champion Jim Turnesa. COLLEGIATE-CUTS A SPECIALTY!! WELCOME STUDENTS * 8 BARBERS 0 NO WAITING * FAN-COOLED The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater Snead, a three-time winner, missed an easy two and a half foot putt on the final green to wind up with 69, tied with a pair of veteran campaigners, Pete, Cooper and E. J. (Dutch) Harri- son, and Felice Torza of Lake Charles, Ill., playing in his first PGA. Turnesa of Briarcliffe, N.Y., came in with a 70. Middlecoff, the Memphis dentist, had a par 71.# field will be cut from 136 to 63 and the defending champion for match play, beginning tomorrow. Vic, a favorite golfing partner of the Duke of Windsor on Long Island, tied for the U. S. Open championship in 1946 at Cleveland and lost, along with Byron Nelson, in a playoff won by Lloyd Man- grum. He has been a quarter-final- ist three times and a semi-finalist once in this event. Hines, a co-medalist and semi- finalist in his first PGA back in 1933, didn't once stray from par and scrambled on only two holes -the 17th and 18th. He had 34-33 while Hines shot 35-32. Hines is best known for his vic- By The Associated Press DETROIT-Ted Gray, posting his third straight victory, snapped the Cleveland Indians' six game winning streak yesterday by hold- ing the runner-up American Lea- gue club to six hits and fanning nine as the last-place Detroit Tig- ers won, 4-2. But the Indians stayed five games from first place. The lea- gue-leading New York Yankees, still in a slump, were shut out in Boston. * * * AL ROSEN'S 18th home run of the season in the first inning with Dale Mitchell on base, accounted for all the Cleveland scoring. ° Bob Lemon, who started for the Indians, was charged with his seventh defeat. The veteran righthander was largely a vic- tim of his own mechanical mis- takes. In the second inning Lemon made a wild pitch that enabled Walt Dropo to score and Jim Del- sing to reach third. Delsing posted the tying run on Don Lund's sin- gle. Lemon walked Delsing, leading off in the fourth. After Steve Sou- chock singled, the Cleveland pitch- er made a wild throw of Lund's infield hit and Delsing scored. GRAY'S SHARP fast ball and teasing slow one kept the Indians baffled. After the first inning In- dian outbreak, Gray let only two Indians get past first base and just four others to reach that far. Among Gray's strikeout vic- tims was Larry Doby, who was called out twice. He also fanned Rosen and Luke Easter once. The Tiger southpaw got a strike- out in every inning but two and twice fanned two in a row. Harvey Kuenn's 10-game bat- ting streak was broken. The Tiger shortstop was unable to get the ball out of the infield. It was the first Tiger triumph over Cleveland since April 17 and only their second all season. The victory squarred the series. * * * RED SOX 4, YANKEES 0 BOSTON-The staggering New York Yankees lost their ninth straight game yesterday, bowing to Mel Parnell's brilliant four-hit pitching as the Boston Red Sox hammered Johnny Sain for a 4-0 victory. Slumping ever closer to the clubs they trampled during their recent 18-game winning streak, the Yankees hit their lowest ebb, since 1945 when they also drop- ped nine in a row. * * * THE ALL-TIME Yankee record of 13 straight defeats in 1913 was1 . . within reach as the proud world champs, seeking their fifthasuc- cessive pennant, roll backward.. Parnell was the complete mas- ter of the once-bristling Yan- kee batting order. The Yanks had their only real chance in the third when Sain walked with one out. Billy Martin forced Sain but Bill Renna came through with a single. With two men on base for the only time all afternoon, Hank Bauer struck out. * -* * BOSTON RIPPED into Sain for a run in the third on Billy Good- mnan's double and George Kell's scoring single. Dick Gernert's single, Sammy White's double and Tom Umph- lett's single added two more in the sixth. The final crusher was a homer by rookie Milt Bolling, his third, with the bases empty in the sev- enth. WHITE SOX 13, BROWNS 4 CHICAGO -Minnie Minoso's two triples drove across five of 10 runs scored by the Chicago White Sox in two innings for a 13-4 crushing of the St. Louis Browns yesterday. Minoso's bases-loaded triple spiced a seven-run sixth inning which sewed up the third-place Sox' 15th decision in 18 games. and moved them to within 512 games of the collapsing Yankees. Minnie also poked a two-run triple in a three-run third inning as the Sox cut loose with extra- base power that included five doubles, three of them by Nellie Fox, and three-baggers by Jim Ri- vera and Sam Mele. BRAVES 10, REDS 2 CINCINNATI-Eddie Mathews took over the National League home run leadership yesterday as the slugging Milwaukee Braves pounded out a 10-2 victory over the Cincinnati Redlegs. The young third baseman hit his 23rd four-bagger in the third inning to break a tie with Ted Kluszewski of the local club. He also had a double and a single to drive in three runs. Mathews has hit three homers in the last two games. Sid Gordon and Joe Adcock al- so homered for the Braves to make it easy for southpaw Warren Spahn to win his ninth game against three defeats this season. * * * PIRATES 5, GIANTS 3 NEW YORK-Hal Rice hit his first homer of the year during a two-run spurt in the 11th inning yesterday as Pittsburgh topped the New York Giants, 5-3. 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 4 .90 2.24 3.92 Figure 5 overage words to a line. Classified deadline daily except Saturday is 3 P.M., Saturdays, 11:30 A.M., for Sunday issue. LOST AND FOUND LOST--Men's gold Wrist watch (Sante Fe). Big reward. Call Detroit TR. 4-3538. FOR SALE '53 VOLKSWAGEN -- German peoples' car, $150 below cost. '48 English Thames, small panel truck, $200 total. Ph. European Products, 2-9780. 1952 CHEVROLET - Light green two- door, perfect condition. Very clean. Radio and heater. Complete service record available. Best offer. Ph. 2-3246.1 M to F (9 to 5). PARAKEETS $6 and $8. Canaries-fe- males and undetermined sex $1.95. Singers $7.95 and up. Mrs. Ruffins, 582 S. Seventh. SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS $1.39. Skip-dents,_ sanforized, whites and assorted colors. Sam's Store, 122 East Washington St. FOR RENT LARGE, COOL double rooms and one single room available for male stu- dents in house 5 minutes from cam- pus. Ice box privileges. Call 3-0849. DELUXE 2-room furnished apartment. Private entrance, semi-private bath, between Ypsi and Ann Arbor. No children, 6 month lease. $67.50 per month. Phone 2-9020. HOME on Whitmore Lake for month of August. Call Whitmore Lake 2835. 2 SINGLE ROOMS on campus for men. $5. 1211 Willard. ROOMS FOR RENT ROOMS. Roomettes and Apartments by day or week for campus visitors. - Campus Tourist Homes, 518 E. Wil- liam. Phone 3-8454. ROOM AND BOARD MEALS FOR MEN-Good food. 1319 Hill. Phone 2-6422. PERSONAL 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. WANTED TO RENT. GRADUATE STUDENT requires-1' bed- room unfurnished apartment for self and wife, September 1953 to June 1955. Also willing to share home on or near campus. J. W. Baker, 231 Anderson Hse. 2-4591. MISCELLANEOUS ALTERATIONS ladies garments. Prompt service. Ph. 2-2678 mornings if possible. SPECIAL-U. S. News & World Report-. 44 weeks for $3.27. Ph. Student Per. iodical, 6007. GOLFERS Have fun at the Partridge Practice Range We furnish clubs and balls -21/2 miles out Washte- now -- right on U.S. 23 for 1 mile. OPEN EVERY DAY 10AM.-11 P.M. TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED - Ford Rouge Plant. Midnight shift (10:00 p.m. to 6:40 a.m. Call 2-3219. Ask for Ed. HELP WANTED WANTED-Taxi cab drivers, full or part time. Yellow and Checker Cab Co. 113 S. Ashley. Ph. 9382. BUSINESS SERVICES 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.. Triomatic Changer Attachment. ANN ARBOR RADIO & TV "Student Service" 1215 So. Univ., Ph. 7942 1r blocks east of East Eng." WASHING, Finished Work, and Rand Ironing. Cotton dresses a speoialty. 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, 24605. TYPING - Reasonable rates, accurate and efficient. Ph. 7590. 830 8. MaIn. EXPERT TYPIST - Rates reasonable. Prompt service. 914 Mary Street. 2-4449. WANTED TO BUY WANTED-Small ice chest for boat. Contact: L, Connick, 217 N, Ingalls. I tories over then champion Denny Shute and Byron Nelson in the * * * 1938 PGA at Shawnee-on-the- THE FINAL 18 holes of quali- Delaware before losing a semi- fying is scheduled today when the final match to Sam Snead, one up. TODAY and Friday IEJ Mats. 50. Eves. 70c the business shirts that are as comfortable as sports shirts! HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 1ill Street invites all interested students to its first .i Coming Saturday "White Witch Doctor" Xavier Cugat - Also - World News Color Cartoon A r Chlte o SL iuild DESTRY RIDES TONIGHT! 3 Complete Shows AT 6:30 - 8:00 - 9:30 P.M. Continuous Performances TONIGHT and FRIDAY At 6:30 - 8:00 - 9:30 P.M. Continuous Performances MARLENE ad JAMES DI ETRICH an STEWART In "A tightly written, capitally directed show, with perfectly grand performances." -New York Times "DESTRY RIDES AGAIN" JACK CARSON - MISCHA AUER - CHARLES WINNINGER BRIAN DONLEVY -- UNA MERKEL - BILLY GILBERT EXTRAI "TH4E CAGEY CANARY" TECHNICOLOR CARTOON "THE LOON'S NECKLACE" IN COLOR New Y Clevela Chicag Boston *Washi *Philad St. Lou Detroi * Nig Major League Standings kMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB W L Pct. GB Fork ...46 22 .676 . ... 'Brooklyn ...42 26 .618 .... and ...41 27 .603 5 Milwaukee .. 43 27 .614 .. go ....42 29 .592 5% *St. Louis ....40 29 .580 2 . .....39 34 .534 9, *Philadelphia 37 27 .578 3 ngton .35 36 .493 121 New York ..34 34 .500 8 lelphia 32 39 .451 152 Cincinnati . .30 39 .435 121/ uis ....27 47 .365 22r *Chicago ....23 43 .348 18 t .....21 49 .300 26 Pittsburgh ..26 50 .342 20 ht game not included * Night games not included YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 4, Cleveland 2 Boston 4, New York 8 Chicago 13, St. Louis 4, Washington at Philadelphia (night) TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Detroit-Garcia (9-4) vs. (Gromek) (2-2) New York at Boston-Raschi (5-4) vs. Brown (6-3) Washington at Philadelphia (night)-Marrero (5-3) vs. Fri- cano (4-4) (Only games scheduled) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 10, Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 5, New York 3 (11 innings) Philadelphia at Brooklyn (night) Chicago at St. Louis (night) TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Brooklyn- Drews (5-5) vs. Meyer (6-3) Cincinnati at Milwaukee -Podbielan (4-6) vs. Antonelli (6-3) (Only games scheduled) MUSIC CALLING A Regular Thursday Night Record Concert To Be Held On The Lawn FIRST CONCERT TONIGHT - 8:00 P.M. P R O G R A M RAVEL - Daphnis et Chloe BLOCH- - Schlonoh Rhapsody Refreshmentis PROKOFIEV - Symphony No. 7 The music will be played on our New Hi-Fidelity System Planned and Installed through the Courtesy of Mr. Irving W. Rozian 11 DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH SUMMER PLAYS -- . WINDOW-WEAVES At lost... shirts that keep a man as cool and comfortable in the office as he is when he's relaxing! What does it? Our new and handsome Airman Window-Weaves--the business shirts that are as comfortable as sports shirts! You can wear them with or without a tie-their Twinleigh collar always looks right. . . and the fabric has millions of tiny windows to keep you $ 1 50 Coming SATURDAY and SUNDAY SATURDAY at 6:30 - 8:00 - 9:30P.M. SUNDAY at 8:00 As Usual J. ARTHUR RANK PRESENTS "A PASSPORT TO PIMLICO" s t a r r i n g eatLon in odern Cooling ENDING TONIGHT GREER GARSON WALTER PIDGEON in "SCANDAL AT SCOURIE" t Tomor"ow MGM's SPL.ASHY // 7rcn/o* DANGEROUS .stge WEsAMng Esther WILLAMS SEASON TIKETS STILL AVAILABLE THIS WEEK THROUGH SATURDAY July 1-4 - THE MADWOMAN OF CHAILLOT July 8-11 - KNICKERBOCKER HOLIDAY July 22-25 - THE COUNTRY GIRL July 29-Aug. 1 - PYGMALION Aug. 6,7, 8 & 10 - THE TALES OF HOFFMANN Wth the School of Music All Performances 8:00 P.M. II Is MARGARET RUTHERFORD - STANLEY HOLLOWAY BASILD RAODnd....I AINTArrhWAYbJF Ill iii i I