snSDAY, JULY 21, 1151 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TAO V w .. -. . ', _ , U ,f, 0 Defeutt Y ankees ,k, , , r . , r. ,, . 1{ CLASSIFIEDS ake Two Games .Al1 By The Associated Press CLEVELAND - The up-and- down Cleveland Indians last night again cooled ofT the New York Yankees, defeating the league leaders 6-4 on a nine-hit barrage, including homers by Joe Tiptor and Dale Mitchell. Mike Garcia, who gave up 10 hits but held the champions well in check except for two innings, won his 12th victory against six defeats. WIITEY FORD was ,the loser, suffering his fourth defeat againsi 10 victories. He was relieved by Ray Scarborough in the seventi after the tribesmen had shelled him for seven hits and five of their six runs. The Indians pushed over a run in the first frame when Al Named C achd John Ghindia, former Michigar quarterback, was named yesterday to the position of head coach of all sports at St. Patrick High School in Wyandotte. Ghindia called the signals for the 1949 Michigan football team, which tied with Ohio State for the Big Ten championship. HE PLAYED a great game against Stanford that year as the Wolverines rolled over the coast team, 27-7, at Palo Alto. It had been previewed as a close game, but Ghindia and his mates completely outclssed a strong Stanford team. *. The announcement of Ghindia's appointment was made yesterday by the Rev. Father J. Walton Stan- ievich, athletic director of St. Pat- rick. Ghindia will be St. Patrick's first fulltime coach. A former Ecorse High School star, Ghindia served two years in the Army Air Corps after his grad- uation from Michigan in June of 1950. 1* Rosen singled after Al Smith and Mitchell walked and then added two more in the fourth on George Strickland's walk and Tipton's homer. In the fifth they got another pair of runs on Mitchell's homer and doubles by Rosen and Larry Doby. A walk and singles by Doby and Strickland in the seventh ac- counted for the Tribe's final run. The Yankees scored three of their runs in the second when Yogi Berra, Gene Woodling, Ford and Billy Martin singled and Gil McDougald doubled. They got an- other in the third on Berra's homer. * *HO E WHITE SOX 1, RED SOX 0 - A ~1 tICAN 'V St,. I:nui. () I ' 2 . 340 48 541 60 60 5.' .535R .473I . 00 :t6 GB 4r< 9 10 25 29' < 29 YESTEIRDAY'S RESULTS C'ievedand 6, New York 4 ('hicago 1, Boston 0 Plhiladelphia 11, St. Louis 1 Washkngton at Detroit (rain) TODAY'S GAM7ES \VashomIon at Betroit (2) New York at C'lev eland Eoston at Chicago Philadciphia at St. Lomis (night) 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 2.94 4 .90 2.24 3.92 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 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, $2.50 each. Phone 2-9020. CANARIES and Parakeets. Bird supplies and cages. 526 S. Seventh at W. Mad- ison FOR SALE-1948 4-door English Austin. Good tires and body, rebuilt motr. An excellent, economical car. Call 2-6520 after 6:00. CAMERAS - Imported precision type just back from Japan. Also a few Japanese Leicas and reflex types pric- ed to sell. Call San Schafitz at 2-2107 after 5 p.m. MODEL A-Excellent condition. Looks and runs like new. R. Johnston, 1015 E. Huron. FOR RENT PERSONAL IS YOUR LIFE worth 8c these "tb.. ing days? Subscribe now--44.00 a . Phone Student Periodical, s. HELP WANTED WANTED-Taxi cab drivers, fuil eN fP time. Yellow and Ohecke Cab C* 113 S. Ashley. Ph. 9382. ATTENTION-Aspiring, young, bQUU-, ful actresses desiring a 'apt( u ,I Contact Morgan and Kahan 'b'%M . cal Producers and Directom 3+42W. BUSINESS SERVICES RADIOS- PHONO$ New and used and sl1,3 i1n 0. Phono needles -- portable baet'fw0 We repair all types of 3adIoa 1 and T. V. Summer Speciot Phong Jack and swntch Iste"0. 0fi in your radio with pUwbsW W46 Triomatic Changer Attachm6em0 ANN ARBOR RADIO & # ' "Student Sr elo ' 1215 So. Univ P. 3a 1% blocks east of 260 X WASHING, Finished Wot,. ea ; Ironing. Cotton drsa w ",**0 y, Ruff dry and wet washing. {U pt; - ing separately. Pre pick-ap p4 livery. Phone 2-9020. EXPERT TYPIST' -Rates; Ammpr Prompt seryloe. 914 MUW ftW 3-4449. REAL ESTATE HOMESITES-On Huron Rilr r. mi. west. Ann Arbor in hnl% Weeet area overlooking Huron liva. Wft Frank Offer, 1710 Seaboa betr ttI. Phone Lorain 7-1495. CHICAGO-Virgil (Fire) Trucks hurled a four-hitter for his sev- enth straight victory as a Chi- cago White Sox pitcher with a 1-0 triumph over the Boston Red Sox yesterday. It gave Trucks a 12-4 season record. The loser was Mel Parnell, his sixth defeat against 14 victories. * * * i l t TEXAS' LADY BULLFIGHTER, Patricia McCormick, 23, is pictured at the moment she was caught on the horn§ of a charging bull in the ring at Tijuana, Mexico. One horn caused a wound in the calf of her leg as she was tossed by the bull for the second time. She continued fighting, and dis- patched the bull with four sword thrusts. NA'IONAL TOUGHEST IN NOVEMBER: IBrooklyn St. L .ois (ncinnlid ( chiago I'ittsburgh 59 47 49 ' i 30 LEAGUE a. .. Era 41 .4, S A 57 .352 66 .313 GB 5 7 91/ 9 l 26' ~ 31'2 Michigan Faces Rugged Grid Sc DODGERS 9-11, CUBS 3-1 BROOKLYN - Brooklyn's high flying Dodgers stretched their Na- tional League lead to 51/2 games last night-their biggest margin of the year-by crushing the hap- less Chicago Cubs in a twi-night doubleheader, 9-3 and 11-1. The Dodgers battered Chicago pitching for 24 hits, including home runs in the first game by Duke Snider and Gil Hodges and in the second by Hodges and Carl Furillo. * * * HODGES drove home enough runs all by himself to win both, agames. Two were aboard when he hit his first home run and he added one more in the opening game. He drove home three in the nightcap. Rookie Johnny Podres and vet- eran Carl Erskine baffled the Culs with each man striking out 10. Podres gave up six hits, Erskine only four. I 1o (Second in a Series) By IVAN N. KAYE Michigan's 1953 football sched- ule is one of extreme contrasts. The beginning, with four con- secutive home games against aver- age competition, offers an excel- lent opportunity for the coaches to bring the team along to its proper peak. * * * THIS PEAK will have to be reached before mid-season, how- ever, because starting with the Minnesota game and continuing through the last four weeks of the campaign, the varsity will face Pennsylvania,, Illinois, Michigan State and Ohio State. Those last two games should present the greatest challenge to the winning of a conferenceI championship. Both the Spar- tans and Buckeyes are rated as top choices to win the Big Ten title. Playing them on successive Saturdays will be the supreme test of the 1953 Michigan team. The University of Washington, playing its first season under new coach John Cherberg, will open the season at the Stadium on Sep- tember 26. The Huskies have car- ried on football relations with Minnesota and Illinois in the past, but this marks their first appear- ance on the Michigan schedule. * * * TULANE will follow Washing- ton into the Stadium, and will furnish Michigan's first Southern football opposition since 1934. The ered a definite threat in the race for the coveted "Championship of the West." ' The Homecoming game will be with the University of Pennsyl- vania on the final day of Octo- ber. The Quakers, once a regu- lar entry on the Michigan sched- ule, are making their first ap- pearance against the Maize and Blue since 1944, at which time they were demolished by one of Fritz Crisler's wartime teams, S41-19. Penn is engaging some top-drawer gridiron opposition this autumnn, what with Ohio State, California and Notre Dame lining up against the boys from Franklin Field. When Coach Bennie Oosterbaan brings his team into the camp of the Fighting Illini on November 7th, it will mark the 39th meeting in an ancient rivalry that dates back to 1894. Michigan has been very successful, winning 25 of the games, but in the last three sea- sons, Illinois has fashioned vic- tories. A veteran line will make the Illini tough again this season, but they do not appear to have enough scoring power to carry them through to the title. The gradua- tion of the great aerial duo of passer Tom O'Connell and end Rex Smith seems to have deprived Illinois of its offense. . * * EAST LANSING'S Macklin Field will be the scene of one of the key games of the Big Ten schedule when on the 14th of November, members will be on the All-Amer- ica team. An overall view of the Michig'n schedule shows it to be made t order for bringing a team alan y to its proper peak, but the con- clusion is so difficult that itr mains to be seen wheth"r any team, no matter how higly key can weather the late-sessio (Tomorrow: The National Piur YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Fhddrlhia6. ilaukee 3 New \o~~~~k 624 oi5 11<1Lbuigh . Cicinnti> TODY' GAE nriiti at PtI uh 4 Incigo ~irs h n APARTMENTS, roomettes, or rooms by day or week for campus visitors. Campus Tourist Homes, 518 E. Wil- liam St. Phone 3-8454. DELUXE Bachelor Apt. Private entrance. Semi-private bath. Between Ypsi and Ann Arbor. $67.50 a month. Ph. 2-9020. READ DAILY CLASSIFIEDS:, Ter s A f ter 15-7. Ii' I, DETROIT - (') - One of the most colorful pages in the histor book of baseball was closed ye terday when the Detroit Ties gave lefthander Hal Newbiouser h unconditional release. Moments after hearing I he news the 32-year-old southpaw--once called the prince of pitchers -,d: * * * "THIS IS the end. I'm finished as an active player. My arm just can't stand the strain anymore." The slim hurler, who earned approximately a half mnllon dollars in his 15-year catser 7ito the Tigers, was of little help to the club this season. 1ie worked only 21: innings for the cellar- dwellers and had an 0-1 record. His earned run average was a high 6.91.I This was a far cry from his heydays from 1944 to '1946 when he won in sparkling order, 29, 25 di-wih t I n Le quo pennant and d it was I Is iue tathewas be- o *c sirl ith Lefty Grove, rea 7 1 l '~hel aod hea nr great Ne n 'heae a a 24-game V'nlir n' I ' n all and wound on v an cxven 209 vie- Take your Favorite Gal to . . this Saturday Night from 9 'til 1. at the League Ballroom Music by A. TOWNSEND'S Orchestra 75c a Person $1.54 a Cowl Ilb toies naai - two game : 1945 W~d was r uable p.' _e i n 117 !es. le won 111 once in the a s anst the fors, he le : s most val- I 44-45. I ' , ; , ,, , - I'l lle FW!, Corge...Treachery... an ove -AND TH E GREAT EVEROLIDES INDIAN WARS! YY --w aE Ri ard CARsO . a~v tiVVY V. F 50c to 5:00 P.M. NOW! THE STORY OF A MAN O PASSIONS I I i f I I I Green Wave gave the great Georgia Tech team one of its toughest games last year, and is expected to be much improved in 1953. Forest Evashevski will bring his Iowa team into Ann Arbor on October 10 to open the Big ,tTen season for the Wolverines. r:::s:Evashevski, who gained fame as Columbia Pictures the blocking back for Tom Har- presents mon on the Michigan teams just I DLbefore World War II, has been rebuilding the run-down Hawk- In one of the great performances of our time eye grid machine. Iowa while as not a contender for the title is always capable of playing at least one standout game in a season. Last year that game was against Ohio State and the Produced by STANLEY KRAMER Hawkeyes pulled the upset of the who gave you "High Noon" year with an 8-0 victory. with M I LLY V I TAL E Northwestern will present an improved team and will be Mich- igan's fourth straight home op- - - - - -_ ponent on October 17. The Wild- cats still smarting from last year's 48-14 drubbing handed them by the Wolverines will be out for re- TIMES EACH NiGHT venge. The last time (1951) Coach Bob Voights brought a team into Michigan Stadium it upset the A 7 70 &9 P... Maize and Blue 6-0. ''' ' * * I t s s 1 the two great intra-state rivals and 26 games. Michigan and Michigan State * clash on the gridiron. Biggie HE HELPED the Tigers win the Munn's Spartans are as good as last year's national champions, and the only question mark about 1953 Kansas tU y GoiF is the strength of their opposition. Michigan and Ohio State are both TOurney deg ns improved and will have to be de-c feated on successive weekends if KANSAS CITY-(P)-Practical-7 the Spartans are to win a title in ly all of the country's top players their first conference football sea- are included in the field of 150j son. who begin play today for the Kan- sas City Open Golf TournamentI seasonhagainstitstraionloeh title Cary Middlecoff has held the! season against its traditional foe past two years. Ohio State i Ann Arbor. Last The notable exceptions are Benr year, as a partisan crowd of Hogan, who is still celebrating his1 80,000 roared its approval in British Open Title, and Sammy the big, double-decked horse- Snead who is complaining of ail- shoe at Columbus, the Buckeyes ments. rined Michign's 2tle deat All profits from the $17,500 meet 'sn - e to be played over the 6 500-yrd lum t money in 194.5,whnh rreportedly paid him a luwdeome $65,000. When his c~wrte came to an end Wednesday, re was still among the ul per bracet yers, earning ap- proxiaen ''I new t wold appen . aer o r sid, se 'I fully i erstand wh.y the club had to do it. "I've had a lot of heartaches in this game but I've had my big mo- ments, too. The Tigers are a fine organization and always treated me well. I'd like to stay with them in some capacity. When the Tigers gave Newhouser his unconditional release, it gave h im t h e "p,.. u n. ity to m a k e a deal for himself with some other club. But his arm pained him too' much and he called it quits-per- j haps very wise VAN BOVEN DRESS S3HIRT S $385 3 for 11.25 Formerly priced to 8.95 Many Other Items at REDUCED PRICES for quick clearance. 4i Oil'e X No Returns No Loy Aways I uoacw oody Mayes' Bucks were probably the strongest team in the conference at the end of the season, but because of early reversals at the hands of Pur- due and Iowa, they were denied the championship. Ohio State has one of the best lines in the nation, a superb passer in quarterback John Borton, and a great broken field runner in Howard "Hopalong" Cassidy. The line is the key to Ohio's high pre- season rating, and there is a good chance that more than one of its par 72 Milburn Country course will go to the local Hospital's fund for crippled ren. Last year $11,000 wast over to the hospital Club Mercy child- turned FOR MEN AND) WOMEN Featur ng 0 Latest Creations O 8 Artists 9 No Waiting I 1 I C - bers I OXXFORD CLOTHES DOBBS HATS BVRXZRRTY COA" DETROIT ANN ARBOR Pan gvn Ciea hf PLEASE NOTE SHOW TH URSDAY & FRIDAY CHAMPIONSHIP PLAYOFT Senior Medics 5, Pickups 2 Dave's Boys 12, Cooley 7 FIFTH PLACE PLAYOFFS Air Force 11, Hayden 7 Social Psychology 17, Wol- verines 4. FONDA ^I" ti . b- V I. ., JACK CARSON I i a Jcme STurber's Famed Broadway Comedy Monstrously amusing . . . Sc 'The Male Animal' if you are interested i i.ne of th funnist sicghts extant"-New York Times ALSO! UR ANNUALE SUMMER TECHNICOLOR CARTOON FESTIVAL Doncdld is Mouse Porky Pluto Duk y Micky Pig & Goofy ALL NEW - FO CINEMA GUILD SHOWING * * * WHEN MICHIGAN journeys to Minneapolis to face the Minnesota Gophers it will mark the 50th an- niversary of the first "Little Brown Jug" game. The Wolverines have held the famed trophy since 1943, and Minnesota, with All-America tailback Paul Giel carrying its hopes for a championship, should be primed to take it back. This is the first away game for the var- sity, which in itself stamps the contest as the first major test of1 the season. Minnesota is consid- r I In honor or Prof. B. Azin, V isiting Sinmer Lecturer at the Unjiversily A IECEPTIONj -will be given by -Hillel and Beth Israel Community Center at 8:00 P.A1 Toni hi at Tillcl. 'if Something more than a motion picture. something off the beaten path of entertainment as we know it... a multi-million dollar Teehnicolot musical that's all song and dance and love and joyl SAMUEL GOLDWYN's New Musical Wonderfilmi G- Hanslo tCirist r--1 I- A- ere ST ?3 ,'t t m I I I 1 9' i 11 !