WEDNESDAY, JULY $, 1953. THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIMEX PAGE Tm~EE Burkemo akes PGA 4 ACES HIGH: : Dressen Selects NL -. ll-Star Mound Corps Championship People's Choice Defeats = Unsung Torza, 2 and 1 [ CLASSIFIEDS By The Associated Press CINCINNATI - Manager Char- lie Dressen of the Brooklyn Dodg- ers yesterday dipped into the ranks of seven clubs to fill out the 25- man National League All-Star team which will meet the Ameri- can League All-Stars in the an- nual game here next Tuesday. Dressen named these seven pitchers: ROBIN ROBERTS (13-6) of the Phils, who has pitched in two pre- vious All-Star games; Gerry Staley (12-3) of the St. Louis Cardinals; Hoyt Wilhelm (5-4), the New York Giants' great reliefer; Murry Dick- son, who has a 7-9 record with Pittsburgh's last place Pirates; Curt Simmons (7-5), back in action for the Phils after a lay- off because of a foot injury; Warren Spahn (10-3) of the Milwaukee Braves who will be making his sixth appearance on an All-Star squad, and Harvey Haddix (10-3) of the St. Louis Cardinals. The rest of the squad named by Dressen to go with the eight start- ers picked by a vote of the fans will be: * * * INFIELDERS-Gil Hodges and Jackie Robinson of the Dodgers, Davey Williams of the Giants, and Granny Hamner of the Phils. Outfielders-Duke Snider and Carl Furillo of the Dodgers, Ralph Kiner of Chicago Cubs and Richie Ashburn of the Phils. Catchers-Del Crandall of the Braves, and Del Rice of the Card- inals. That array will go with a start- ing lineup made up of Ted Klu- szewski of Cincinnati, first base; Red Schoendienst of St. Louis, sec- ond base; Peewee Reese of Brook- lyn, shortstop;wEddie Mathews of Milwaukee, third base; Stan Mu- sial of St. Louis, left field; Gus Bell of Cincinnati, center field; Enos Slaughter of St. Louis, right field, and Roy Campanella of Brooklyn, catcher. * * * DODGERS TAKE TWO PITTSBURGH-Pitcher Preach- er Roe smashed the first home run of his major league career and Billy Cox collected two round trip- pers as the Brooklyn Dodgers wal- loped the Pittsburgh Pirates, 9-5 in the second game of a doublehead- er yesterday. The Dodgers also won the first game, 5-4. BIRMINGHAM, Mich. - (A) - Bold Walter Burkemo, the people's choice, tamed Felice Torza the toy tiger 2 and 1 yesterday for the 35th Professional Golfers Associa- tion championship. The blond belter from Frank- lin, Mich., only one up at the end of the morning round, ripped off the first three holes of the after- noon with some great pressure put- ting to put the little pro from St. Charles, Ill., into a hole from which he never recovered. * * * JACKIE ROBINSON CHUCH DRESSEN ... slaps homer . . . all-star choices THEJ sprang 52 foot, 135-pound Torza brisk rallies twice to cut ANOTHER SUBWAY SERIES? Yankees Still Appear Best in American Be On Time # WATCH REPAIRING * FREE ESTIMATES # GOOD SERVICE ALL WORK DONE IN THE STORE (When your Timepiece goes bad, Bring it to McNab!) McNab Jewelers 347 Maynard Phone 6630 By IVAN N. KAYE The old baseball adage that the team in first place on Independ- ence Day will win the pennant in- dictes another "subway series" be- tween the Yankees and Dodgers. With all of the recent commo- tion over the partial collapse of Casey Stengel's crew, one might have thought that the Yanks were lolling in the depths of the league cellar instead of leading the junior circuit as they are by six games. TO BE SURE, a great many egos were deflated when the Bombers took nine straight lacings, but the fact remains that the Yankees, have won 22 of their last 33 games, still a mighty good mark for a team which was supposed to be falling apart. - The White Sox and Indians, who have been fortunate enough to profit greatly from the re- cent Yankee slump, have now brought themselves into con- tending positions. They will give fans some anxious moments be- fore the season ends, but neither seems to have the essentials to win the pennant. In the case of the White Sox, they have been held together by their great leader, Paul Richards. Richards is the spirit behind the "Go Go Sox." He makes them hus- tle, and it is to him that the lion's share of the credit should be giv- en for the recent upsurge of Chi- cago's baseball fortunes. * * * IF THE SOX had several more like Billy Pierce, then they might seriously menace the Yankees, but unfortunately for Richards, the pitching staff has not come Power PHILADELPHIA - (") -- Yankee statisticians, who drag out the tape measure each time Mickey Mantle belts a homer, have figured out the Oklahoma kid's 13 home runs have trav- elled a total distance of more than a mile. The exact distance, according to their figures, is 5,508 feet. His homers have averaged 424 feet, whether he hits them left- handed or rightheanded. through at all, and save for the brilliant reliefing of Harry Dor- ish, the Pale Hose would be down in the second division. Cleveland on the surface ap- pears to have the team to stop New York, but there seems to be some intangible like team spirit lacking in the Indians' make-up. Between hitters like Doby, Rosen and Easter, and a 'MEN'S SHORT-SLEEVED SEERSUCKER SPORT SHIRTS Ideal for hot summer weather and Easy to Wash . . . with very little ironing necessary. Reg. $2.95 2 for $5.00 Colors: Maize, White, or Blue 607 E. Liberty (next to Michigan Theater)' I II |t Major League Standings I AMERICAN LEAGUE *New York *Cleveland *Chicago *Boston *Washington *Philadelphia *St. Louis *Detroit w 52 45 45 42 40 32 27 26 L 24 30 31 37 38 46 52 51 Pet. .684 .600 .592 .532 .513 .410 .342 .338 GB 6%/ 7 111/ 13 21 261/2 261/ NATIONAL W Brooklyn 48 *Milwaukee 45; *St. Louis 43 *Philadelphia 40; *New York 37 *Cincinnati 34 *Chicago 27 Pittsburgh 27 'night games LEAGUE L Pet. 28 .632 31 .592 32 .573 31 .563 36 .507 42 .447 46 .370 55 .329 GB 3 4 5Y2 9%/ 14 192 24 pitching staff with such stal- warts as Lemon, Wynn, Garcia and Feller the Cleveland club should be more successful than its record indicates. It is with more than a little sad- ness then that the baseball fan who likes diversity in his national passtime ponders the consequences of a fifth American League flag flying from the roof-top of the Yankee Stadium. * * * THE RECENT slump has serv- ed only to raise false hopes in the hearts of Cleveland and Chicago partisans that their teams might catch the leader By Labor Day, the Yankees should be coasting home with a substantial lead. It might not be too early to raise the ancient cry "Wait 'til next year," after all, many of the Yankee stars are getting on in years. The fact that certain Yankee stars are nearing retire. ment is of little solace, however because rumor has it that they have people on the bench at Kansas City who could be regu- lars on any other team in the league. Which of the five National League teams currently competing for the right to lose to the Yan- kees in the World Series will even- tually triumph is at this juncture anybody's guess AN OCEAN of printer's ink has been expended telling the sporting public that Milwaukee's Braves are the greatest underdog sensa- tion since the 1914 Bostons. The Braves are not, as too many had thought during the spring, a poor team. They have gotten good pitching, and when that failed, they got powerful hitting from Ed Matthews and Andy Pafko. The recent slump may have relieved some of the tension, and it is entirely possible that the Braves will be the ones to take that early October thrashing from the Yankees. Brooklyn, the Cardinals, the Phillies (or better, Robin Roberts) and the Giants will all have plen- ty to say about the pennant, but Milwaukee has been getting the most consistent pitching, and that will weigh heavily in its favor as the season wears on. The Cardinals should provide the best competition, if only be- cause of superior pitching depth. If Stanky's rookies come through, the Mound City entry might well win the pennant. The Cardinals, it should be noted, are the only Na- tional Leaguers to beat the Yan- kees in the past quarter of a cen- tury. I-M SCORES WR Jokers 17, Social Psych. 16 Chemistry A 8, U Hospital Medics 7 WR Digits 12, Wolverines 6 Pharmacology 16, Pharmacy 8 Sthe advantage to two hles at the S24th, but Burkemo applied the screws and closed the match with a par four for a half on the 35th. The toy tiger-as the little Italian became known in his un- exected sweep into the finals-- couldn't control his tee shots through 35 m.p.m. gusts of wind in the morning, and after lunch his putting went completely sour. On the first 18 holes over the 6,465-yard, par 71 Birmingham Country Club course, Torza spray- ed his tee shots into the rough sev- en times. On the first nine holes of the final round, he missed four putts of six feet and less. BURKEMO, four up with five to play and three up with three to go, let Torza stay alive with some erratic play. Walter went over par on the 29th, which he three-putted, and on the 32nd and 34th, where he hit into the rough. The PGA is worth $5,000 in immediate cash for Burkemo, 34-year-old Detroiter who took a sound lacing from Sam Snead in the PGA finals at Oakmont, Pa., In 1951. It also gives him an automatic spot on the U. S. Ry- der Cup team which meets Brit- tain's best at Wentworth, Eng. in the fall. As runnerup, Torza collects $3,- 000-the first big. purse he ever British Open CARNOUSTIE, Scotland - () - Ben Hogan and Carnous- tie's soggy Championship course ran head on in the British Open golf tournament yesterday, and the grizzled seaside layout's slow and snaggy greens lofted the U.S. Open champion's score to a 75. That 75 along with a 70 Monday on the easier Burnside Course gave the Texan a 145 total - easily low enough to qualify him for the tournament proper beginning today. Defending champion Bobby Locke of South Africa, rustled up a brilliant 71, one under un- official par at Championship, for a two-day 136 and the med- al honors. won. A pro of less than six years, this is his first PGA. * * * IN DEFEAT, the friendly chat- ty Torza had one consolation. A tough scrapper who put out Gene Sarazen and defending champion Jim Turnesa on opening day, he win the hearts of a gallery esti- mated at 15,000. The crowd on the whole was still for Burkemo, the favorite son, but Torza picked up hund- reds of loudly vocal supporters. Burkemo is pro at nearby Frank- lin Hills and is owner of a pros- perous driving range. One of 10 children, he was a caddy and a public links player before turning pro. Have fun at the Partridge Practice Range We furnish clubs and ball -22 mniles out Washte- nw -- right on U.S. 23 for 1 mile. OPEN EVERY DAY 1 A.M. -11 P.M. 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 average 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 in Round-up Room on Friday morning. Zippo lighter in silver case. Maya design. Initials L.C.S. Return to Information Desk, Museum Build- ing. Reward. LOST-Pair of bone rim glasses in vicin- ity of rifle range. If found call Frank at 6703. FOR SALE PARAKEETS $6 and $8. Canaries-fe- males and undetermined sex $1.95. Singers $7.95 and up. Mrs. Ruffins, 562 S. Seventh. 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 $1.75. One large wal- nut veneer table and five chairs $25. One wool rug $75. One metal doll house, partially furnished, $5. Two large walnut veneer buffets, $15 each. One small folding steel cot $10.00. Large davenport with green leather- - ette, $15. Phone 2-9020. 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. ROOMS FOR RENT ROOMS. Roomettes and Apartments by day or week for campus visitors. - Campus Tourist Homes, 518 E. Wil- liam. Phone 3.84x4. ONE-HALF of large double with lava- tory and bowl. One large single. Phone 2-1465, 923 Olivia Ave. LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS for married couple. Campus section. Monroe St. Ph. 6087 evenings. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre North End Women's League Building oloM READ USE DAILY CLASSIFI EDS Dept. of Speech Presents Anderson & Weill's Satirical Musical Comedy KNICKERBOCKER HOLIDAY The "September Song" Musical TONIGHT thru Sat. $1.50-- $1.20 - 90c 8 P.M. WANTED-Taxi cab drivers, full or part time. Yellow and Checker Cab Co. 113 S.NAshley. Ph. 9382. STUDENT to wait table for meals. Phone 2-6422. BUSINESS SERVICES RAD IOS - 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 1 blocks east of East Eng. 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. MISCELLANEOUS IS YOUR TIME worth 6c? Subscribe now, $3 a year. Phone 6007, Student Periodical Agency. PERSONALITY HAIR STYLING FOR MEN AND WOMEN Featuring 0 Latest Creations " 8 Artists * No Waiting The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre HELP WANTED Starting AIa TODAY Recipient of the year's Matinees 50c Evenings 70c *Not including night games YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit at Chicago (night) Cleveland at St. Louis (night) New York at Philadelphia (night) TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Chicago Cleveland at Chicago Cleveland at St. Louis (night) Philadelphia- at Washington (night) Boston at New York (night) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Brooklyn 5, Pittsburgh 4 (1st) Brooklyn 9, Pittsburgh 5 (2nd) Philadelphia at New York (2- twilight) Chicago at Milwaukee (night) St. Louis at Cincinnati (night) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Pittsburgh (night) Brooklyn at Philadelphia (night) Chicago at Milwaukee (night) St. Louis at Cincinnati (night) "HIGI RAT i. . highest critical HEST "MOVIE' of the ING!" WEEK" -News --Life Mag. Terror in in ;ghts awards! UP there with the finest -Times Fredric March Gloria Grahame I I fi LRUNDRY SERVICE STUDENT BUNDLE mninimum 0 12c each additional pound All your clothing laundered, FLUFF DRIED and NEATLY FOLDED LOW EXTRA CHARGE_ for finishing these articles II CAMERAS FOR RENT 8 mm movie - 16 mm movie also 8mm and 16mm PROJECTORS 35 mm stereo Polaroid and Snapshot Cameras at Purchase Camera Shop 1116 So. University Phone 6972 Che SL q Our show times vary according to the length of the feature. Please not starting times for each night. THURSDAY & FRIDAY at 7:00 and 9:00 P.M. ELiA KAZAN qF"WWW Directed it! ORA Robert E. Sherwood Wrote it for screen! Cirected by ELlA KAZAN SAVE AT SAM'S____ rm ==MOM F illsgn. i EAIAE SAVE AT SAM'S STORE For Summer Comfort AS ADVERTISED IN , POST - LIFE - ESQUIRE ...,WASHABLE RAYON Ending Today ESTHER WILLIAMS "Dangerous When Wet" - I I SHIRTS, additional...-...---. --.... - - 8c * (Full dress shirts and silk or wool sport shirts slightly higher) HANDKERCHIEFS .... .... ........... . 18c JEANNE CRAIN PAUL DOUGLAS Ii ii KIRK DOUGLAS LINDA DARN ELL I ANN SOTHERN THELMA RITTER Tomorrow' CLARK GENE DANGER! ROMANE! INTRIGUE! W V I a F W 3 0 la 3c Just Phone 23-123 A LETTER TO THREE WIE $495 COLORS: BROWN - BLUE GREEN GREY - RUST - TAN - YELLOW OPEN MONDAY UNTIL 8:30 P.M. I'l r 0 "U Varsity Laundry will I i I SATURDAY at 6:30, 8:00, 9:30 P.M. PI V D ~J 'u1IO. I . nl nnI 10% 1 I EXPANSION WAIST-BAND 1 PIC''K I IP nneq npl l\/Pp I I® II I III III I I 1. l....)k-,-., .1-m i"". *... I S L -_ I