SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE U It's the Same Old Story: Bantam Ben Takes Oper CLASSIFIEDS * * * Record Last Round 68 Gives Texan 72-Hole Score of 282 Par Out 444 445 434-36 Hogan Out 444 434 434-34 Par In 444 344 445-36-72 Hogan In 444 254 344-34-68 (73-71-70-68-282) CARNOUSTIE, Scotland, July 10-(P)--Ben Hogan, golf's living legend, won the British Open championship on his first try today, shooting a record 68 on the last round for a 72-hole score of 282. 4He had rounds of 73-71-70-68. His total was the second lowest in the tourney's history. THE WIRY TEXAN won with a fantastic finish such as has marked his many triumphs in America. Starting the day two strokes back of Britons Eric Brown and Dai Rees, he collared the field with a morning round of 70 and then came home with a parade of birdies, as his international foes faded. He finished four strokes .ahead of Amateur Frank Stranahan of Toledo, O.; Dai Rees, diminutive Welshman; Australia's Peter Thom- son, runnerup to Bobby Locke last year, and Antonio Cerdos, of .Argentina. IN HIS TRIUMPH, Hogan completed a 1953 grand slam com- parable to the four-tournament sweep by Atlanta's Bob Jones, who won the British amateur and open and the U. S. amateur and open in 1930. He won the Masters tournament this spring at Augusta, Ga., with a record score and then captured lis fourth U. S. open at Oakmont, thus tying the winning records of Willie Anderson and Jones. On his last round, Hogan rang in four birdies, one of them a 35- foot chip shot from off the green on the par four fifth. PLAYING GRIMLY and mechanically, smoking cigarete chain- fashion, the Texas shotmaker also had birdies on the sixth, thirteenth and eighteenth. On the par five 567-yard sixth, the Texan walloped a drive 300 yards down the middyp. His approach fell 80 yards from the pin. He chopped within three feet of the hole and sank the putt. This was one of his great holes of the day. He was driving with amazing power throughout the round. * * * * ON THE 167-YARD thirteenth, Hogan laid his tee shot 12 feet from the pin and he calmly canned it for his birdie deuce. With a huge, milling crowd of more than 15,000 looking on, Hogan finished dramatically on the 503-yard par five eighteenth hole. He reached the green with his second shot and two-putted from 35 feet. Towards the end of his 36 holes today, the determined Texan showed definite signs of strain. He was limping noticeably down the seventeenth and eighteenth fairways. HE WAS VERY pale under his tan when he walked off the last green. With a wan smile on his face, Hogan repeated "I feel good, but so very tired. His last round 68 broke the Carnoustie course record of 69, set 20 years ago by Horton Smith and tied during this tournament by Argentina's Antonio Cerda and Frank Stranahan. BEN HOGAN' . . . fantastic finish . , , Ben's Triumph Is Fifth in Six 1953 Outings CARNOUSTIE, Scotland-(IP)- Ben Hogan's victory in the British Open golf championship yester- day was his fifth triumph in six major tournaments this year. His only defeat was in the Greenbrier Open at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., when he finished in a tie for third. Sammy Snead won that tournament. ** * HOGAN'S other victories this year: April 12, won his second Mas- ters tournament at Augusta, Ga., with a tourney record score of 274, five strokes under the old mark. May 3, won the Pan-American Open at Mexico City witi 286. May 24, won the Colonial In- vitation tournament at Ft. Worth with 282. June 13, won his fourth U. S. Open championship at Oakmont, Pa., with course record score of 283. Old competitive record was 294. Scotch Fans Laud Hogan As 'Ice Mon' NEW YORK-(P)-When golf- ers discuss Ben Hogan, the ques- tion they ask most is: "Is he hu- man?" Many of them are convinced he isn't. They gave up long ago try- ing to win tournaments in which "The Little Man" is entered. * * * THEY CALL him "The Little Man" with respect and awe. The Scots at Carnoustie, who watched him win the British Open yester- day on his first try, have their own name for him: "The wee ice mon." "He's the only golfer in the world I'm scared of," once said Lloyd Mangrum. On the golf course, Hogan re- minds you of a tailor weaving a dark cloak of defeat for his vic- tims. * * * HE IS TRIM and tight-lipped. He never sees anything or any- body, they say, except the fair- way and the pin. You can almost see the wheels grinding away in his head as he makes shot after shot with unbelievable precision. He is a chain-smoker. He puffs away perpetually on a cig- arette held in an incongruous black holder. When he hits, he gives the holder to his caddy to hold. He drops half-smoked butts-along with birdie putts-- on almost every green. "Golf," said Hogan after win- ning the Masters this spring with a record score of 274, "is 20 per cent skill and 80 per cent man- agement." WHAT DISTINGUISHES Hogan from other golfers of the era? A won't-be-licked spirit and , un- matched concentration. In 1949, he was almost killed in an automobile-bus accident which left his legs badly maimed. Some said then he might never walk again, much less play. But a year later he came back. Playing on battered legs which had to be strapped up at night, he won his second National Open in 1950. Then in the spring of 1951 he won the Masters, and later the Open again. THERE ARE some who have found Hogan cold. He isn't at all. He is one of the necest and most considerate of all tournament golf- ers. He never "blows off," as the expression goes. Perhaps he was a bit hard to approach or understand before his near-fatal automobile acci- dent. If so, it might have been attri- butable to his rough early life. He' and his brother quit school as children to support a fatherless family. He found life hard, and he met it the same way. TIPS HIS CAP-Bantam Ben Hogan, comeback hero of the golf- ing world, thanks a cheering throng at Carnoutsie, Scotland, after garnering his initial British Open Title. He had to shoot four be- low par to beat Toledo's Frank Stranahan, who got a 69 on his final round. SORE FLIPPER? Branca, Dodger Right Hander, Comes to .Detroit on Waivers MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DRYS 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. 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. PORTABLE Record Player - 3-speed, manual, $30. Phil Kearney, 2-6674 after 6 SOLID Baby Carriage with mattress. Reasonable. Phone 2-8262. RETURNING HOME-Must sell '47 Nash. good condition. New tires. Call at 614 Monroe, back apt. FOR RENT APARTMENTS, roomettes, or rooms by dlay or week for campus visitors. Campus Tourist Homes, 518 E. Wil- liam St. Phone 3-8454. ROOMS FOR RENT ONE-HALF of large double with lava- tory and bowl. One large single. Phone 2-1465, 923 Olivia Ave. TRANSPORTATION RIDERS NEEDED-Share expenses to New Jersey. Leave July 17. Louis Lavine, Rm. 212, Union. PERSONAL WANTED-Tutor for marketing course. Call 2-4591, 114 Greene House between. 6:30-7:30 p.m. HELP WANTED WANTED-Taxi cab drivers, full or part time. Yellow and Checker Cab Co. 113 S. Ashley. Ph. 9382. BUSINESS SERVICES RA DIOS 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 &r TV "Student Service" 1215 So. Univ., Ph. 7942 1s 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. EXPERT TYPIST -- Rates reasonable. Prompt service. 914 Mary Street. 3-4449. TYPING -- Reasonable rates, accurate and efficient. Ph. 7590. 830 S. Main., MISCELLANEOUS IS YOUR TIME worth 6? Subscribe now, $3 a year. Phone 6007, Student Periodical Agency. ALTERATIONS ladies garments. Prompt service. Ph. 2-2678 mornings if possible. BOOKS HCLAEBLAB DETROIT - (A) - The Detroit Tigers yesterday took another step in rebuilding their mound staff with the purchase, via the waiver route, of veteran Brooklyn Dodger hurler Ralph T. Branca. The 27 year old right-hander will join the Tigers here today. Branca, a six-foot-three inch hurl- er, broke into organized baseball in 1943. He made a brief appear- ance with the Dodgers in 1944 be- fore being farmed out. IN HIS FIRST full year with the Dodgers in 1945, Branca posted a 5-6 record. His best year with the Dodgers was 1947 when he won 21 games and lost 12. Branca has appeared in seven games this year for the National League leaders without being credited with either a win or a loss. His lifetime record stands at 80 wins and 58 losses. The veteran Dodger moundsman has an earned run average of 3:66 over his nine year National League career. * ,,.m * TIGER front-office spokesmen said Branca's purchase brings the Bengal playing roster to the 25- player limit set by the American League. The Dodgers were reported to have been forced to place Branca on the waiver list because his wife, Ann, inherited stock in the Brooklyn club. Under National League rules, no player may own stock in the club for which he plays. I MMM Z, PORTERFIELD TAKES LOSS: Yank Circuit Smashes Batter Nats, 6-1 By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Irv Noren, Don Bollweg and Yogi Berra hit home runs to knock out BZob Porterfield yesterday as the New York Yan- kees downed Washington, 6-1, for Eddie Lopat's ninth victory. Porterfield, who blanked' the Yanks Sunday, simply didn't have GOLFERS Have fun at the Partridge Practice Range We furnish clubs and balls -212 miles out Washte- now -right on U.S., 23 for 1 mile. OPEN EVERY DAY 10A.M. - 11 P.M. it. Ht was wild and when he got it over, the Yanks hit it into the seats. * * * A WALK TO Hank Bauer and a single by Lopat with two out set the scene for Noren's three-run homer in the second. Porterfield had two strikes on Noren, a for- mer Washington outfielder, before he hit it into the right field stands. Bob threw down his glove in disgust. Bollweg led off the third with his homer and Berra smashed his after Mickey Mantle walked. Porterfield steadied to retire the next two men but, after he walked Phil Rizzuto, Manager Bucky Harris called in left- handed Al Sima. Washington scored its only run in the first. Although the Yanks held a com- Late Show at 11:00 P.M. NOW! fortable five-run lead, Manager Casey Stengel lifted Lopat for a pinch hitter with a man on sec- ond and two out in the eighth. Allie Reynolds, making his 24th appearance, finished up. The line score: Washington 100 000 000-1 10 0 New York ..330 000 00x-6 8 2 Porterfield, Sima (3), Lane (8) and Fitzgerald; Lopat, Reynolds (9) and Berra. W-Lopat; L-Porterfield. HRS. New York-Noren, Boll- weg, Berra. * * * CUBS ON BLOCK CHICAGO-Owner P. K. Wrig- ley said yesterday he might sell his Chicago Cubs in the wake of an announced offer to purchase the club by a group of Chicago businessmen reportedly having five million dollar backing. Wrigley said a "Chicago Ameri- can" story yesterday was the first he knew of the offer made by a Chicago attorney, Bailey Stanton, who Thursday told Cub business manager James T. Gallagher he represented a half-dozen interest- ed Chicagoans. RALPH BRANCA . trades uniforms NOW PLAYING ON THE "BELL, BOOK AND CANDLE" DRAMARAMA Stave at SALINE MILL THEATRE Route 112, Just Ten Minutes from Ann Arbor Guest Admission $1.80 Season Membership (4 Plays) $6.00 Call Saline 31 UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 10:30: Service, with sermon by the pastor, "When I am weak, then am I strong," 3rd in summer series on 'Paradoxes in Chris- tianity." Sunday at 6:00: Lutheran Student Club (Gamma Delta). Supper and Program, with talk by Mr. Robert Clausen of Adrian, "Stagy Evangelism." FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Henry Kuizenga, Minister Charles Mitchell, Assistant Minister William S. Baker, University Pastor 11:00 A.M.: Morning Worship. "The Error of the Open Mind." Dr. Baker, preaching. 5:30 P.M.: Summer Student Fellowship will meet at the Church for a picnic supper. Prof. How- ard McClusky will discuss the Christian Im- perative in Family Life. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 E. Huron C. H. Loucks, Minister and Student Counselor 10:00 A.M.: Student Bible Class studies "Proverbs" 11:00 A.M.: Church Worship. Sermon topic "The Love of God." 7:00 P.M.: Roger Williams Student Guild: Miss Ferne Woodward will report on The National Baptist Student Association at Green Lake, Wisconsin. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION (National Lutheran Council) Hill and Forest Avenue Dr. H. 0. Yoder, Pastor Sunday-9:30 A.M.: Bible Study. 10:30 A.M.: Worship Service - Sermon by Dr. Yoder, "Nice People or New Men." 7:00 P.M.: "Public Education and Religion:"-- Dr, Gerhard Lenski, Dept. of Sociology. Tuesday-7:30 P.M.: Study of World's Great Literature. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH State and Huron Streets, Phone 2-1121 Wm. C. Bennett, Pastor 10:00 A.M.: Church School. 11:00 A.M.: "Shut In By The Lord." 7:30 P.M.: "He Was Transfigured Before Them." 7:45 Wednesday: Prayer Meeting. A film of Korea, "The Flame" will be shown. A Friendly Church where the Word is preached. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Sts. Masses Daily at 7:00 A.M., 8:00 A.M. Sunday at 8:00 A.M., 10:00 A.M., 11:30 A.M. Novena Devotions, Wednesday Evenings 7:30 P.M. Newman Club Rooms in Father Richard Center. 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion and Comment 10:00 A.M.: Student Breakfast, Lounge of Pa House. 11:00 A.M.: Church School (thru 6th grade) 11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer and Sermon. 12:15 P.M.: After-Service Fellowship. 6:00 P.M.: Student Buffet Supper and Spea Lounge. 8:00 P.M.: Evensong, St. Michael's Chapel. ory. rish ker, I BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED 423 South Fourth Ave. Walter S. Press, Pastor Irene Applin Boice, Director of Music 10:45 A.M.: Worship Service. Sermon by Rev. Theodore Smale, "The Purpose of Preaching." 11:30 A.M.: Broadcast over WHRV. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Dwight S. Large, Erland J. Wangdahl, Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers 9:30 A.M.: Informal Discussion group, Pine Room. Topic, "'The Christian Student and The World Struggle." 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship, "The Great Prayer of Our Century" Dr. Large, preaching 3:00'P.M.: Meet in Wesley Lounge for Outdoor Picnic meeting. Swimming, volley-ball and picnic supper. Vesper worship service. All students are welcome. Welcome to Wesley Foundation Rooms, open daily. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH No. Division at Catherine t o, ER- N N T 4V4wase I 8:30 EVERY NIGHT BUT MONDAY THROUGH JULY 19 During the Week: Wednesday, 7:00 A.M.: Holy Communion; Friday, 12:10 P.M.: Holy Communion; Friday 4:00- 6:00 P.M.: Student Tea in Lounge of Parish House. FRIENDS (QUAKER) MEETING Lane Hall 11:00 A.M. Sundays. Visitors welcome. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. July 12-Sacrament 5:00 P.M.: Sunday Evening Service. 8:00 P.M. Wednesday: TestimonialbService. A free reading room is maintained at 339 South, Main Street where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read bor- rowed. or purchased. The Reading Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 to 5, Friday evenings from 7 to 9, and Sunday afternoons from 2:30 to 4:30. I I * - WF - I - I W . ll i I ENDING TONIGHT "Two Flags West" with Linda Darnell, Cornell Wilde and Joseph Cotten and "The Toughest Mon in Arizono" with VAUGHN MONROE In Technicolor I OheiaS L quild COMPLETE NEW SHOW TONIGHT at 6:30 -- 8:00 -- 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY at 8:00 P.M. Only AN ANN ARBOR PREMIERE J. Arthur Rank presents ALEC GNU I 1wNESS "gives a superb comic performance . . . in a contagiously funny picture. Its light-hearted gayety is genuine and universal. A first-class comedy designed to give the customers a run for their money." - N. Y. Times. WITH A SPLENDID CAST IN 11 9 U EL .w . __1 wU\ k A L - I i, ' SUNDAY First Exclusive Showing in This Area "TLI" CTAt'n.E" CAMPUS CHAPEL (Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan) Washtenaw at Forest THE CHURCH OF CHRIST Y.M.C.A. Auditorium Sundays: 10:15, 11:00 A.M., 7:30 P.M. Thursdays: 7:30 P.M , Bible Study. G. Wheer Utley, Minister, Hear: "The Herald of Truth." WXYZ-ABC Network AFff rl r ULL-LENGTHJrI N%, I I I RAMS LUVL! I I III I 11 i