y SATURDAY, JULY, 24, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SATURDAY, JULY, 24, 1954 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Cleveland Downs Yankees, 8-2 -.0000wowft E*[Efl FOR SALE SITUATION WANTED SUMMER STUDENT DIRECTORY on HOUSEWORK or restaurant Work, Homers Help Tribe Wideng Junior Circuit Lead Margin Thompson Sparks Braves in 3-2 Triumph Over Giant, Cardinals Slip Past Dodgers 6-4 Snead, Middlecroff Gain, As Fur gol Upset in PGA NEW YORK (R - Al Smith's three-run homer with the score tied in the seventh and two home runs by Larry Doby ruined Eddie Lopat Friday night, b o o s t i n g Cleveland's American League lead to 1% games with an 8-2 victory over the New York Yankees in the opener of their vital series. If the Tribe should lose the other two games, they still will leave town Sunday night with a percent- age point edge after this triumph, scored before 61,446 paid, the larg- est turnout of the season in either league. It was the eighth straight game in which Lopat had failed to fin- ish and it marked the Yankees first loss at night in 14 games. Smith, Cleveland's hitting star, drove in five runs altogether, add- ing two more in the ninth with a bases loaded single. Lopat, mixing his soft stuff with an occasional fast ball, rode along on a 2-0 lead until Doby hit his 18th homer into the right field seats in the sixth. The Yanks had reached Early Wynn for a pair in the fourth on Irv Noren's third straight hit, a single with the bases loaded. The Yanks kept pecking away at Wynn through the early innings, getting seven hits in the first four while Lopat rocked away with a two-hit shutout. Doby's homer with two out in the sixth was only the Tribe's fourth hit. Cleveland's ninth-inning surge might have added even more runs to the lopsided score, but for a double play ball hit by Bobby Avila. The Indians loaded the bases on Strickland's single, a bunt single by Hegan and a sacrifice by Wynn on which the throw to third was too late. Strickland was injured on on the play at third and was re- placed by Sam Dente. Smith sin- gled home Dente and Hegan before Avila rapped into the double play. * * * Braves 3, Giants 2 MILWAUKEELP-Bobby Thomp- son, who came to Milwaukee from New York in the winter trades, slapped a pinch single to left with two out in the ninth inning Friday night to give the Braves a 3-2 victory over the Giants before a new record crowd of 45,046 in County Stadium. Tompson's sharp smash past third base scored Jim Pendleton, running for Andy Pafko, from sec- and base to break up a tie game. The Braves scored their other runs on homers by Joe Adcock and Eddie Mathews. The single, Thomson's third in four pinchhitting assignments since he returned to limited duty for the Braves after a spring training an- kle fracture, hung the loss on Hoyt Wilhelm. Wilhelm relieved Ruben Gomez to start the eighth inning. * * * Cards 6, Dodgers 4 ST. LOUIS ()-Rookie Joe Cun- ningham drove in three runs with a double and tie-breaking homer Friday night to give Vic Raschi his first victory since June 15 and the St. Louis Cardinals a fifth straight triumph by a 6-4 score over the Brooklyn Dodgers. Cunningham's sixth homer in 23 games in the majors came in the sixth inning of a 4-4 contest and was belted off righthander Russ Meyer, who suffered his third de- feat against seven wins. Raschi, scoring his seventh tri- umph against five setbacks, yield- ed a three-run homer in the first inning to Gil Hodges-his 26th of the season-and then checked the Dodgers with one tally thereafter. « * * Pirates 7, Reds 4 CINCINNATI(-The Pittsburgh Pirates picked up their first Cros- ley Field victory of the year Fri- day night, downing the Cincinnati Redlegs 7-4. Pinchhitter Sid Gor- don homered with one aboard in the seventh inning to break up a 4-4 tie and the Pirates added an insurance run in the ninth on a double, sacrifice and single. Jim Greengrass, Cincinnati out- fielder, "booted in" five runs- three for his own Reds and two for the Pirates. He lined his 18th home run of the season in the first frame with two teammates aboard. But in the top of the second, with two Bucs on base, he permitted pitcher Dick Littlefield's single to roll past him. * * * Cubs 5-3, Phils 2-5 CHICAGO WP-The Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies divided a doubleheader Friday with the Cubs winning the opener 5-2 and the Phils coming back to take the nightcap 5-3 when Danny Schell singled with the bases loaded in the first half of the 13th inning. Robin Roberts, who relieved starter Bob Miller at the beginning of the eighth inning, checked the Cubs with three hits and one run the rest of the way to earn his 14th victory. He's lost eight. Bill Tremel was charged with the defeat that leveled his record at 1-1. The rookie righthander held the Phils at bay from the ninth until the 13th when Granny Ham- ner doubled with one out. Del Ennis was passed intention- ally and Bobby Morgan got a walk to fill the bases. Then Schell lined a two-run single to center to settle the issue. f * « Orioles 7, A's 5 PHILADELPHIAU)-Chuck Dier- ing hit a two-run single in the sixth inning to break open a see- saw ball game Friday night as the Baltimore Orioles beat the Phila- delphia Athletics 7-5 in a battle for the American League cellar. The lead bounced back and forth for the first five innings. Lou Lim- mer homered in the first-his seventh-to give the A's a head start. Then Baltimore pulled away to a 6-4 lead in the sixtif. * * *S Chisox 7, Red Sox 1 BOSTON () - Virgil Trucks pitched airtight ball in relief of Harry Dorish as Chico Carrasquel led an 11-hit Chicago attack with three singles Friday night as the White Sox defeated Boston 7-1 in rain-soaked Fenway Park. Senators 8, Tigers 3 WASHINGTON(A) - Washington erupted for five runs in the first inning against Al Aber and breezed to an 8-3 victory over Detroit Fri- day night. Roy Sievers smashed his 16th home run off Bob Miller with Mickey Vernon aboard in the fifth inning. ST. PAUL, Minn. (N-Jim Brown-\ ing, a paunchy New England home professional, punctured the steady march of favorites Friday when he cut down the new national open champion, Ed Furgol, in the sec- ond round of the Professional Golfers Assn. Tournament. The 39-year-old Weston, Mass., links teacher, whose present state open title is the biggest he's ever won, threw a string of steady pars at the rusty open king to win on the final hole, one up. Sam Snead, dangerously close to elimination in the morning round, shook the kinks out of both his sore neck and his golf game in the LARRY DOBY ... double trouble Sooner-Bear Clash Starts NCAA TV Football Slate NEW YORK (R) - Oklahoma's\ Orange Bowl champions and the University of California will meet in the first NCAA televised foot- ball game Sept. 18, The Associated Press learned Friday. The games will be carried through Dec. 4 by the American Broadcasting Co. No sponsor has as yet been an- nounced. The schedule calls for 13 dates. Regional telecasts will be used Oct. 23 and Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 25. The game Oct. 2 will come from the Pacific Coast where Illinois HaEajor League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE will meet Stanford. This was ar- ranged to benefit from the time difference since a World Series baseball game will be played the same day. Other games on the schedule: Sept. 25, Iowa - Michigan State; Oct. 9, Wisconsin-Rice; Oct. 16, Oregon-Southern California; Pitts- burgh - Northwestern (regionally; Oct. 30, Penn-Penn State; Nov. 6, Baylor-Texas; Nov. 13, Georgia Tech - Alabama; Nov. 20, Ohio State-Michigan; Nov. 25 (Thanks- giving), Maryland-Mississippi (re- gionally). Nov. 27, Army-Navy; Dec. 4, Notre Dame - Southern Methodist. Chisox May Lose Fain Fob Season CHICAGO (P)-Ferris Fain, star first baseman for the Chicago White Sox, will have his injured right knee operated on next week and possibly may be out of action the remainder of the season. Fain, who has been hospitalized since Tuesday while awaiting sur- gery, was injured June 27 in a home plate collision at Boston. He suffered an internal carti- lage tear, making it impossible for him to straighten his leg. Dr. John Claridge, White Sox surgeon, said the Sox' other cele- brated cripple, third baseman George Kell, will be able to work out Saturday. Kell injured his right knee when he tripped over first base in a night game at Cleveland July 2. afternoon to lead other top name performers forward into the third round. Burkemo Wins Other winners, as the field was cut from 64 to 16, were the de- fending titleholder, blond Walter Burkemo of Franklin, Mich.; med- alist Ed (Pork Chops) Oliver; for- mer national open champion Cary Middlecoff; Johnny Revolta, the jut-jawed 1935 PGA king, and Ro- berto De Vicenzo, the gay gaucho from the Argentine. Third round matches will be con- tested Saturday over the 36-hole route on the Keller Club course, and this is supposed to be the point where class tells. Furgol won his opening match from Johnny Weitzel of Hershey, Pa., 3 and 2, but he was fighting from behind almost all the way against Browning after pitching over the green against a fence and taking a bogey five on the first hole. Furgol Rallies Browning went two up at the fourth. Furgol rallied to level the match at the turn but the imper- turbable New Englander sank a 15-foot birdie putt on the 14th to go ahead and stay there. It was the only hole not halved on the return side. Snead was the height of incon- sistency as he defeated Tony Hol- guin, of Midlothian, Ill., one up, in the morning match and walloped Jim Milward of Green Bay, Wis., 4 and 3, in the afternoon. Seeking his fourth PGA crown, the ailing Snead was five over par for his first round match, which he managed to win when Holguin blew two of the last three holes. He was five under in the after- noon. Par 71 Par for the 6,615-yard Keller public course is 71. Burkemo, showing a determina- tion not to give up his title, played superb sub-par golf to eliminate tough Dave Douglas of Grossinger, N. Y., 4 and 2, in the morning and Claude Harmon, the former Masters champion from Mamaro- neck, N. Y., 2 and 1 in the after- noon. iverputskids under Jackson Bradley of Houston, Tex., 4 and 3, then ousted Bill Nary of Reno, Nev., one up. The surprising, 43-year-old Re- volta refused to wilt under a blaz- ing sun, trimming Ellsworth Vines, the onetime national tennis cham- pion from Los Angeles, 3 and 2, and Toby Lyons of Jamestown, N. Y., 5 and 4. Middlecoff, co - favorite with Snead, had a tight squeeze in the first round before rallying to beat Joe Brown of Des Moines, one up. In the afternoon, he trounced Bob Toski of Livingston, N. J., 2 and 1. MICHIGAN DAILY Phone NO 23-24-1 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. 11:00 A.M. Saturday LOST AND FOUND LOST-a black purse in or near the Maynard St. Carport early last week. Valuable ID. Call NO 3-8161 before 4 or 3-1531 ext. 282 after 4. Reward. )174A FOR SALE 78 rpm RECORD COLLECTION, not sold separately; popular. Call NO 2-8262 after noon. )581B 35mm CAMERA, BOLSEY B-2 complete with coupled range finder, flash, case $40. Call NO 2-9560 after 6 p.m. )584B ENGLISH BICYCLE, Men's-geared and fully equipped $35 or trade for deer rifle; also WEBSTER CHICAGO 2- speed record player $28, table top radio. CallrNO 2-2887 or NO 3-3580. )585B HERB ESTES4 1949 FORD, 2-door custom, radio, heater.......................$395 1948 FORD, 2-door, with radio, heater, good runner .........$295 1947 FORD Club Coupe, radio, heater ...................... $195 1946 PLYMOUTH Club Coupe, an ex- ceptionally good running car $225 1940 FORD. 2-door, in pretty fair shape .......................... $95 1947 OLDSMOBILE, 4-door sedan, Hydramatic .................. $295 YOUR FORD DEALER NO 8-6987 1116 S. University )534B 1948 WILLYS-radio, heater, overdrive, new rubber, real nice. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )572B 1947 DODGE MOTOR in A-1 condition, $50; Phone NO 2-9020. )557B! BIG SAVINGS-Men's short sleeve sports shirts. Seersuckers, skip dents. $1.59, 2 for $3. Sam's Store, 122 E. Wash- ington. )559B sale at the Student Publications Bldg. and all the bookstores from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. this week. A limited number for only 50c. GOOD desks, 2-4391 USED FURNITURE, student miscellaneous items. Call NO after 6 p.m. }565B CONN-ALTO SAX, gold lacquer, good condition, cheap. Also fine Pedler clarinet, excellent condition. Must sell. Call Diane or Russ AuWerter at NO 2-0652 or NO 2-3241. )555B 1946 OLDSMOBILE, Club Coupe, radio heater, hydramatic, one owner. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )549B FOR RENT BY DAY OR WEEK-furnished I and 2 bedroom campus apartments. Rooms. Families welcome. Campus Tourist Homes. 518 E. Williams. NO 3-8454. (near State). )92C ROOMS FOR RENT AVAILABLE for summer and fall for women students. Kitchen privileges, 2 baths, ' block from campus, 417 E. Liberty. )103D STUDIO APARTMENT, private entrance and bath, combination living room and sleeping room, kitchenette and dining room, furnished. Call NO 2-4391 after 6 p.m. )102D THREE LARGE ROOMS for male stu- dents for summer. Single or double. 940 Greenwood. NO 8-9531. )97D TRANSPORTATION CALIFORNIA BOUND, driving to San Diego area July 31, desire riders. Call NO 3-2969. )97G WANTED DRIVER for my '52 Chevrolet, to San Francisco or Stanford, latter part of August. Call NO 2-7101. )96G )564B Purchase from Purchase LEICA I-C with F 3.5 Elmar and case. Like new. $80. Purchase Camera mornings only. Exclusive sewing by the hour. Experienced. Phone NO 3-3294. MAN would like permanent caretaker or janitor's job-very dependable, has own transportation. Wants to live out. Call NO 2-9020. )3P HELP WANTED PERMANENT part-time position, 20-30 hours per week; typing and filing, campus area. Pleasant environment. Please write Box 126, Student Pub- lications Bldg., 420 Maynard, giving experience. )122H BUSINESS SERVICES HAVE YOU A DRESS or other gar- ment you would like shortened? Call NO 2-2678. )641 TYPING - Reasonable rates, accurate and efficient, done at home. Phone NO 8-7590, 830 S. Main. )611 WEBCOR 3 Speaker Musicale The first truly hi-fidelity table model phonograph. Hear it and compare it at ANN ARBOR RADIO AND TV "Student Service" 1217 S. University Ph. NO 8-7942 1% blocks east of East Eng. )571 WASHING. Finished work and hand ironing. Rough dry and wet wash- ing. Also ironing separately. Free ,pick-up and delivery. Phone XO 2-9020. Specialize in cotton dresses. )581 ALTERATIONS - dressmaking, hems, shirt collars turned. Call NO 3-3294. )621 Daily Classifieds Bring Quick ResulIts 503 R. Huron NO 2-32611 W L Cleveland . .64 28 New York . .64 31 Chicago ....59 36 Detroit .....40 51 Washington 39 50 Boston.....37 53 Baltimore . .33 60 Philadelphia 31 58 Pet. .696 .674 .621 .440 .438 .411 .355 .348 GB 11/ 6%/ 23% 23 26 311,4 31x1 TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at New York-Mossi (4-1) vs. Reynolds (10-1). Chicago at Boston - Keegan (12-5) vs. Kiely (3-6). Baltimore at Philadelphia-- Coleman (9-10) vs. Gray (1-3). Detroit at Washington (night) -Aber (3-3) vs. McDermott (5- 11). * * * NATIONAL LEAGUE OPEN EVENINGS )5793 1949 FORD Custom, V-8, radio, heat- er, overdrive, runs perfect, Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washingotn, NO 2-4588. )583B CIROFLEX camera with extra lenses --$47. Call NO 2-3251, Rm. 6. )578B 1948 CHEVROLET, Club Coupe, black, radio, heater, real clean. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )582B CROWN-GRAPHIC CAMERA 4x5, coat- ed lens, compur-rapid shutter and all attachments. This all-purpose camera is in excellent condition. Call -NO 2-1425. )577B REVERE TAPE RECORDER, deluxe, one year old, 2 hour playing time. Call NO 2-9967. )580B 1946 MERCURY-4-door, radio, heater, new rubber. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )574B GOLFERS Have fun at the Partridge Practice Range We furnish clubs and balls - 21/2 miles out Washtenaw - right on U.S. 23 for 1 mile. OPEN EVERY DAY 10A.M.- 11 P.M. NOW!! ~PobsHlros sTeMnc NOW!! gob's Hilarious As The Menace Of Venice! Color by TICNIcoLoR:: < W L New York . .62 32 Brooklyn ...56 38 Milwaukee ..48 45 Philadelphia 45 45 St. Louis ...46 46 Cincinnati . .47 48 Chicago ....37 54 Pittsburgh . .30 63 Pet. .660 .596 .516 .500 .500 .495 .407 .323 GB 6 13% 15 15 151/ 23 313/ Cinema SL quild starring' BB13RoP~r .JOAN FONTAiE' ALSO The Town of NO Return!! . . . Where Every Shadow Hides a Gun!! "RIDE CLEAR OF DIABLO" AUDIE MURPHY - DAN DURYEA TODAY'S GAMES New York at Milwaukee-Lid- die (4-2) vs. Spahn (9-10). Brooklyn at St. Louis (night) -Meyer (7-2) vs. Lawrence (6-3). Philadelphia at Chicago - Simmons (8-8) vs. Cole (0-2). Pittsburgh at Cincinnati - Surkont (6-12) vs. Fowler (7-5). "Where's (harley? with RAY BOLGER ALLYN McLERIE ROBERT SHACKLETSU I 1d ,: <-d i si NOW erf etiolz ran, Modern Goolzn " Doors Open 12:45 Matinees 45c Eves. & Sun. 75c !t Of vatu Saturday 7:00 and 9:00 Sunday 8:00 only L Ima ITS MR. PUNS FUNN IIEST... ONE OF TV4E MOST 14ILAPJOLIS MUSICALS EVER! .> 81 -W A WrJ t "::: hL' *. ~V i 'i "HIGHEST RATING- 50c Architecture Auditorium , . .. I i I OWL <., Selecte and pl sters a Group A Group B omen d groups o lay shoes bi nd Californ s Shoe Sale f summer sandals, casuals y Penaljo, Sandler Sport- ia Cobblers. ular $9.95 to $12.95 values variety of colors and patterns - lect from- ies to $8.95 in a wide range tyles that represent savings o 50%- f w - I"31 0 WI' 0449%wed ,qto k- - Reg- in a to se Valu of s up t WARNRK& fBRO' ... . .. ... ", J V l B-- C73f I -qY I I V/ i lUN 86i0 , 2 oa ;} w }I U I (® -11C