0 WEDNESDAY, JULY" 21,1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE WEDNESDAY, 3ULY 21, 1954 TflE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THIIEI Giants Win i in Exra Innings 'Little Mo' Seriously Injured; Unable To Defend Net Crown Indians Tie Red Sox in 16 Innings; Hold Slim Margin SAN DIEGO, Calif. (A-Tennis q u e e n Maureen Connolly was crushed against a big cement truck while riding her horse here Tues- day and so seriously injured that doctors said she would be unable to defend her U. S. Women's crown at Forest Hills, N. Y., next month. Surgery and x-rays determined that the small bone in her lower right leg was broken and that I-M SCORES SOFTBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS FIRST PLACE PLAYOFFS Chemistry 'A' 5, Phi Delta Phi 3 x Earl's Boys 8, Green House 1 Pickups 9, PhiChi 8 Psychology 'A' 3, Hinsdale House 1 THIRD PLACE PLAYOFFS. P1 Lambda Phi 5, WRRC Jok- ers 4 muscles and tendons of the calf were damaged by a deep gash. This definitely ended her hope for winning the U. S. championship for the fourth straight time. She will hardly be able to get DO YOU KNOW that Casey Sten- gel, present manager of the New York Yankees, is the only man- ager to win five straight league pennants and lose four All-Star games. r around, doctors said, by the start of the tournament, Aug. 28. "Little Mo," who will be 20 Sept. 17, was wheeled into surgery within an hour after reaching the hospital. She was riding her thoroughbred Merryboy on a road near Mission Valley polo grounds when the mix- in-transit cement truck came along and her horse became frightened and reared, pinning her leg against the truck.-, Miss Connolly returned home Monday after defending her Euro- pean and English titles. She holds most of the world's champion- ships. WHITEY LOCKMAN ... game winner Giles Suspends and Fines Stan-y; Forfeit Upheld1 GOLFERS Have fun at the Partridge Practice Range We balls furnish clubs and - 21/2 miles out Washtenaw - right on U.S. 23 for 1 mile. OPEN EVERY DAY 10 A.M. - 11 P.M. e* action4n )lodern Gooling STARTING TODAY THE ULTIMATE INl SHOCKING ST.LOUIS () --Eddie Stanky, fiery manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, Tuesday drew a five- day suspension for his stalling tactics in a game Sunday against the Philadelphia Phils which erupt- ed into a general free-for-all. The Cardinals ,manager also was fined $100 after a special hearing in St. Louis by Warren Giles, pres- ident of the National -League. Manager Terry Moore of the Phils, was in the midst of the fighting, came off scot free in Giles' ruling. During the hearing, it was brought out, Moore said he raced onto the field in an effort to restore peace. Upheld Forfeit Giles also upheld forfeiture to the Phils by Umpire Babe Pinelli of the riotous second game of the doubleheader here because of stalling by Stanky. "We will not condone unreason- able delays in games." Giles said in a statement. Yvars, Torgeson Suspended Catcher Sal Yvars of the Cardi- nals and first baseman Earl Torg- son, the first to exchange blows Sunday in an uprising that in- volved Stanky and Moore as well as most of the players, also drew suspensions. Yvars was suspended for three days and Torgeson for two. Stanky later publicly apologized for his actions Sunday. "I know I have embarrassed and hurt St. Louis people, baseball na- tionally, my reputation as a base- ball man. . . and owe them all a public apology," he said. Stanky said his wife and friends had been telling him there was a difference between being a player and a manager. President Giles said both Yvars and Torgeson were guilty "but Yvars, by droppinghis glove and mask, ready to fight, contributed to a delay of the game which al- ready had been delayed too much." Effective Tuesday All of the suspensions were ef- fective Tuesday. The Cardinals announced that Coach John Riddle will be in charge of the club during Stanky's suspension, which continues through Sunday. Pitcher Ellis Deal of the Cardi- nals, who had been suspended tem- porarily with Stanky, Yvars and Torgeson p e n d i n g the hearing Tuesday, escaped further action. The Sunday brawl broke out in the first half of the fifth inning of the second game. Stanky down- ed Moore, whom he fired as a Cardinal coach in 1952, with a tackle around the neck as players of the two clubs pummeled and wrestled each other. Cards Misunderstood Giles said a misunderstanding of league rules by the Cardinals was a factor in the forfeit of the game. The Cardinals understood the lights could not be turned on because the game had started after 6 p.m. Giles said that under a new league rule the lights could have been turned on. Darkness was fast approaching shortly after peace was restored and Stanky was calling in a third pitcher in the fifth when Pinelli declared the 9-0 forfeit. The Cardi- nals were behind 8-1 and Stanky apparently was hoping darkness would force the game to be called before five innings were com- pleted and the game counted. CINCINNATI (R)-The Cincin- nati Redlegs defense sagged twice in the 13th inning yesterday and the New York Giants pushed over the run that gave them a 2-1 victory. A single, two errors, and Whitey Lockman's long fly ac- counted for the winning tally. Lockman's fly scored Joe Ama- Ifitino from third. Amalfitino had gone in to run for Bobby Hofman after Hofman had singled and gone to second on Jim Greengrass' er- ror. He moved to third when Rocky Bridges booted Johnny An- tonelli's bounder. The victory gave the Giants a seven-game lead over the second- place Brooklyn Dodgers, who lost Tuesday to the Chicago Cubs 3-2. Antonelli, pitching all the way for the Giants, racked up his 14th triumph of the season as against only two defeats and he struck out 10 Redlegs in the process. The only run he allowed was a fifth - inning homer by Ted Klus- zewski. * * /*s BOSTON (Wednesday) (R) - The Cleveland Indians retained a slim four percentage point American League lead by tying the Boston Red Sox, 5-5, in a pulsating 4 hour, 26 minute, 16-inning battle called at 12:57 a.m. (EDT) Wednesday due to the league curfew law. Lefthanded reliefer Dom Mossi of the Indians pitched three-hit shutout ball over the left sevens innigs to hold the tie after Cleve- land's Bobby Avila hit a two-out, two-run homer in the ninth inning to deadlock the issue. The game, which will have to be replayed, was called under a loop ruling which says no inning can begin after 12:50 a.m. Boston got brilliant relief work from Ellis Kinder and Sid Hudson who gave up but one safety in the extra innings. * * * NEW YORK (R - The New York Yankees put on a fine de- fensive display to back up an ex- Red Wings To Announce _New Coach DETROIT (R-The Detroit Red Wings will announce their new coach Wedsneday, and it likely will be 37-year-old Jim Skinner, the original choice to replace Tommy Ivan. Skinner arrived in Detroit Mon- day to huddle with Jack Adams, general manager of the Red Wings. Ivan left Detroit to become gen- eral manager of the Chicago Black Hawks. NED GARVER ... wins nitecap cellent clutch pitching perfor- mance by'Whitey Ford Wednesday night as they whipped the Chicago White Sox 4-1. * * * ST.LOUIS UR) -- Bunching their runs in the first inning - two of them on Ray Jablonski's triple- the St. Louis Cardinals backed up Harvey Haddix's hurling for a 4-2 victory Wednesday night over the Philadelphia Phils Gerry Staley had to put down a ninth-inning Phillie threat, however, to protect Haddix's 14th triumph this year. PHILADELPHIA (M -- Harvey Kuenn hit a double and a grand slam homer as the Detroit Tigers scored 9 runs in the first inning, then coasted to a 12-0 win over the Philadelphia Athletics Wednes- day night in the opener of a twi- nighter. The Tigers came from be- hind to win the nightcap 4-3, scor- ing three runs in the eighth - two of them on Bill Tuttle's homer. * * * WASHINGTON (R)-Roy Sievers blasted his 15th home run and Ed- die Yost slammed a bases-loaded triple as Washington routed Joe Coleman and breezed to a 9-1 vic- tory over Baltimore Tuesday night behind the eight-hit pitching of Johnny Schmitz. The Senators erupted for four runs in the second inning, when Ed FitzGerald and Johnny Pesky both singled across two runs. They staged another four-run inning in the sixth on Sievers' homer and Yost's three-run triple. * * * CHICAGO UR) -- Pitcher Jim Hughes' fumble of a toss at first base for the third out in the 10th inning enabled Gene Baker, who doubled, to score the winning run as the Chicago Cubs defeated Brooklyn 3-2 Tuesday. 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 3.42 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 11:00 A.M. Saturday LOST AND FOUND LOST-Ladies' white gold Bulova watch in vicinity of campus Tuesday morn- ing. Liberal reward. Call NO 2-6811. )173A 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 SUMMER STUDENT DIRECTORY on 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. )564B 1946 MERCURY-4-door, radio, heater, new rubber. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )574B TWO STORY FRAME HOUSE-in good condition, 3 bedrooms, closet in each. 11,2 bathrooms. Full basement. Spac- ious garage. In good neighborhood and close to campus. Yard planted with assorted fruit trees, berries and vege- table garden producing more than enough for average family needs. Front yard and back planted in as- sorted bulbs. Real home for children. If interested, write, giving2name and phone number to Box 124, Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard or call NO 2-3241. })576E Purchase from Purchase LEICA I-C with F 3.5 Elmar and case. Like new. $80. Purchase Camera NO 8-6987 1116 S. University )534B 1950 MERCURY-radio, heater, over- drive, low mileage. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )573B TWO ENGLISH BICYCLES-men's wo- men's, good condition, together or separately. James Wood, NO 2-8190 after 5 p.m. )575B 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 1950 FORD Custom-Six, black, 25,000 miles, sharp car. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2.4588. )569B GOOD USED FURNITURE, student desks, miscellaneous items. Call NO 2-4391 after 6 p.m. )565B FOR SALE 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 1 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, 12 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 WANTED TO RENT BY SEPTEMBER 1st -- unfurnished apartment with stove, refrigerator and heat. 3 or 4 rooms and bath. Near Law School, older couple with mature, obedient dog. Write to Box 125, Stu- dent Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St., or call NO 2-3241. )28K QUIET, responsible graduate student and wife wish to rent clean, efficient furnished 3-room apartment near campus. Will pay $80 per month in- cluding utilities. Write Box 123, Stu- dent PublicationsBldg., 420 Maynard or Call NO 2-3241. )27K UNUSUAL GIFTS 1 for all occasions U 0 INDIA ART SHOP 3 30 MAYNARD STREET (Across from the Arcade) >o=cc==< O=><=o=>- om0<=omo omoo <=:> < )