SDA Y, JULY: d, 1&s5 THE AliC.Itik6AA DAILV SIMY, JULY 6, 1956elitE ihiCxnk6A~% IiAIIA Complete All-Star Teams Announced Rule .Denies Dyck's Sale To Indians 4* KANSAS CITY, Mo. (P)-The Cleveland Indians learned yester- day they had run afoul of major league baseball rules in trying to buy outfielder Jim Dyck from their farm club, the Indianapolis Indians. Cleveland got Dyck in a trade last year from the Baltimore Ori- oles, then sold him to Indianapolis last winter. That means, under the regula- ~.tions, that Cleveland cannot re- acquire Dyck's contract until after the baseball draft this fall. No Loophole A Tribe spokesman said, "There is just no way we can take Dyck under the regulations. The Indians only Monday an- nounced they were purchasing him. The 33-year-old outfielder made only one appearance in the Cleveland lineup last season, hit- ting a pinch single in the final game of the year. He led the A- merican Association in batting at Indianapolis this season, with a .338-average, 17 homers and 57 runs-batted-in. Frick Cites Fatal Rule Ford Frick, baseball commission- er, cited a. rule the Indians had overlooked when he blocked the sale. The law is that when a major league club sells a player to its minor league affiliate it cannot buy him back until other teams have liad a chance to obtain him in the annual draft. The Indians were unable to op- tion Dyck to Indianapolis because he already had been optioned three times. That is why he was sold. Nationals' Hitting Power Balances AL's Pitching Lopez Names Six Indians to AL Squad; Durocher Bypasses Ashburn in Namings By The Associated Press American League pitching will be pitted against National League power next Tuesday at the 22nd annual All-Star game in Milwau- kee. A checV of the complete teams, announced Tuesday by Cleveland's Al Lopez and New York's Leo Dur- Colts Sign Coach BALTIMORE ()-The Bal- timore Colts of the National Football League Tuesday signed on a new coach, Tom Hughes of North Dakota University. The North Dakota line coach will instruct ends for the Colts. A former tackle at Purdue and at Missouri, he played with the Los Angeles Dons in 1946. ocher, the respective managers, showed the National League hitters out-h o mn e r i n g their American League rivals by a 269 to 163 mer- gin. That does not include the five four-baggers of Don Newcombe, one \of the senioi circuit's seven pitchers. AL Pitchers Ahead On the other hand, the eight American L e a g u e pitchers have racked up 76 victories as compared to only 65 for the other side. Four of the American League hurlers - Cleveland's Early Wynn, Boston's Frank Sullivan and ,New York's Whitey Ford and Bob Tur- ley - have won 10 or more while only two National Leaguers - Brooklyn's Newcombe and Phila- Cubs Headed for Best Season Since 1945 NL Championship CHICAGO (M) - The Chicago Cubs, who haven't finished in the National' League's first division since taking third inr1946, have parlayed home runs and a share of luck into a comeback that could well be tops in sports for the year. Running in second place most of the campaign, the Bruins-no better than seventh the last two years and 100-1 shots for the pennant on the early 1955 form sheet-have provided as big a sur- prise as the Brooklyn Dodgers' first-place stampede. Ahead of Braves With a 44-3 record and a two- game bulge over the third-place New Record Set In Mile and Half LONDON (')-Britain's Gordon Pirie last night ran the mile and a half in 6 minutes, 26 seconds to break the unofficial world record for the distance. The previous best time was 6:31.2, set by Hungary's Sandor Iharos. There is no official world record for the distance, which is not rec- ognized by the International Ath- letic Association as a competition event. Milwaukee Braves, who open a two-game series in Wrigley Field Wednesday; Stan Hack's Cubs are headed for their winningest sea- son since capturing the pennant with 98-56 in 1945. Sparked by Banks Foremost in the resurgence is 24-year-old Erni Banks, who will be starting at hortstop for the Nationals in the All-Star game at Milwaukee next Tuesday. After being obtained from the Kansas City Monarchs, Banks hit .275 as a rookie last year and has ignored the so-called sophomore jinx this season with a blistering pace of .301 and 21 home runs. 96 Four-Baggers As a team the Cubs have ham- mered 96 homers including 20 in their last 9 games. The Cuts also have combined luck with hustling spirit for win- ning rallies. Their opponents have scored first in 15 of the last 18 games, but Cub uprisings have ac- counted for seven victories. They have wrung out 16 one-run tri- umphs in 29 such affairs. Hack's men, too, have been the best bargain hunters in the league, sweeping 4 of 13 doubleheaders and splitting the other 9. This, in itself, has given them 17 victories in 26 games for a .654 twin bill pace. delphia's Robin Roberts - are in be appearing in an All-Star classic double figures. Lopez Names Six Indians The biggest surprise was Lopez' naming of six players from his own team - pitchers Wynn and Herb Score, infielders Al R o e n and Bobby Avila and outfields Larry Doby and Al Smith. In contrast, Durocher named only outfielder Willie Mays who, along with Don Mueller, will re- present the world champion New York Giants. Ashburn Omitted Durocher's big surprise came in his failure to name Philadelphia's Richie Ashburn to the National team. Ashburn is presently leading National League batters with a lofty .349 average. The American League holds a 13-8 edge in the series that began in 1933. There was no game in 1945. The starting squads: NATIONALS Kluszewski, Cincinnati, lb Schoendienst, St. Louis, 2b Mathews, Milwaukee, 3b Banks, Chicago, ss Ennis, Philadelphia, If Snider, Brooklyn, f Mueller, New York, rf Campanella, Brooklyn, c AMERICANS Vernon, Washington, lb Fox, Chicago, 2b Finigan, Kansas City, 3b Kuenn, Detroit, ss Williams, Boston, If Mantle; New York, of Kaline, Detroit, rf Berra, New York, e PITCHERS NATIONALS Don Newcombe, Brooklyn, rh Robin Roberts, Philadelphia, rh Gene Conley, Milwaukee, rh Sam Jones, Chicago, rh Harvey Haddix, S. Louis, lh Louis Arroyo, St. Louis, lh Joe Nuxhall, Cincinnati, lh AMERICANS Early Wynn, Cleveland, rh Bob Turley, New York, rh Dick Donovan, Chicago, rh Frank Sullivan, Boston, rh Jim Wilson, Baltimore, rh Herb Score, Cleveland, lh Whitey Ford, New York, lh } Billy Pierce, Chicago, lh Billy Hoeft, Detroit, Ih ALTERNATES ANNOUNCED National League alternates: in- fielders Stan Musial, St. Louis; Gene Baker and Ransom Jackson, Chicago; Johnny Logan, Milwau- kee, and Gil Hodges, Brooklyn outfielders Willie Mays, New York: Hank A a r o n, Milwaukee, and Frank Thomas, Pittsburgh; c- ch- ers Del Crandall, Milwaukee, and Smoky Burgess, Cincinnati. American League alternates: in- fielders Bobby Avila and Al Rosen, Cleveland; Chico Carrasquel, Chi- cago, and Vic Power, Kansas City; outfielders Al Smith and Larry Doby, Cleveland and Jackie Jen- sen, Boston; catcher Sherman Lol- lar, Chicago. Vanderbilt's Horse May Run in West INGLEWOOD, Calif. (JP-Alfred G. Vanderbilt's stakes winning Social Outcast may be added to the cast in the $100,000 added Hollywood Gold Cup Handicap July 15. Trainer Bill Winfrey, in New York, expressed keen interest in flying Social Outcast to Holly- wood Park in a long distance con- versation today with Al Wesson, Hollywood's publicity director. Winfrey said he must talk first with Vanderbilt, who is in Europe. But if the owner agrees, the horse could be flown out from New York tonight. European and American Hairstyles Our Specialty " 6 Stylists * No Appointments needed * Air Conditioned The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre ConradTops U.S. Entries 'In Golf Open' ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (R) - Joe Conrad, the spunky little Tex- an who won the British Amateur gnf title a month ago, led by five American qualifiers Tuesday in the 85th British Open Championship. Conrad, with rounds of 67-72-139 over the Old and New courses of St. Andrews, finished the 36-hole qualifying test four strokes behind the medalist, Frank Jowle of Eng- land, and tied with seven star pro- fessionals for fourth place. Ten Americans failed to qualify. Five Americans Survive Only Conrad of San Antonio; veteran Byron Nelson of Roanoke, Tex.; Amateur Jimmy McHale of Philadelphia; Johnny Bulla of Pittsburgh and Ed Furgol, the lame-armed Clayton, Mo., profes- sional who won the 1954 U.S Open, survived the qualifying play. Harris Bewails Pitching Woes Of Fast-Sinking Detroit Tigers WILLIE MAYS ... named to All-Star Managers Fight as Reds Defeat Cardinals, 5-4 By The Associated Press " homers in one game. That's tops CINCINNATI - Manager Bir- for the majors. Mays, who also hit die Tebbetts of the Cincinnati Red- two homers in Monday's twin bill legs and Harry "The Hat" Walker with the Pirates, now has 25. of the St. Louis Cardinals battled Don Mueller, who had two of with their fists last night in the the Giants' 12 hits, came through ninth inning as the Reds rallied with a triple in the ninth for his with four hits and two runs to 100th safety of the season. beat the Cards 5-4. Antonelli struck out 10 men and Players from both squads mixed walked four in winning his sev- it up on the field after the Teb- enth game against 10 defeats. betts-Walker tiff. Both were eject- Mays smashed his first in the ed from the game along with St. second inning with one aboard. Louis catcher Bill Sarni. No one was on and two were out Tebbetts was bleeding from the when he blasted his second in the mouth. eighth. Stalling Tactics The Cincinnati manager was PHILLIES 5, DODGERS 4 angered over what he considered PHILADELPHIA - Robin Rob- the stalling tactics of the Cardi- erts pushed one nun across by nals with the score tied and two walking in the second inning and out in the Red ninth. It was the doubled two more home in the wildest free-for-all at Crosley sixth as the -Philadelphia Phillies IFieldin years. beat the Brooklyn Dodgers 5-4. The fisticuffs overshadowed the Righthander Roberts picked up baseball game. The Reds had his 12th victory of the year al- built up a 3-1 lead by the seventh though he needed help in the on Ted Kluszewski's 28th home ninth inning. run of the season and Bobby Ad- Duke Snider homered for Brook- ams' second. Adams doubled and lyn, clubbing the first pitch of the starting pitched Gerry Staley sin- sixth inning over the rightfield gled for the third tally. wall. It was Snider's 28th round Red Schoendienst, pinchitter tripper of the season and the 24th Joe Frazier and Bill Virdon hom- of the year off Roberts. It also ered off Staley. The Cards went was Duke's third homer in two ahead on two singles and a walk. days. Gus Bell opened the Reds; ninth Roberts Fans Six with a double. Adams singled, Ray Roberts, who has lost seven, Jablonski bunted, and Johnny fanned six and allowed 11 hits. In Temple singled home the winning the Brooklyn second, Carl Furillo run after the fight. singled and Dixie Howell doubled * * * *N 1 *I * 1him in. GIANTS 11, PIRATES 1 Then in the Phils half of the in- PITTSBURGH - S o u t h p a w ning, Del Ennis and Jim Green- Johnny Antonelli hurled a four- grass singled. Andy Seminick hitter and Willie Mays smashed walked to load the bases and Rob- two home runs as the New York erts worked starter Karl Spooner Giants smothered the Pittsburgh for a walk, forcing home a run. Pirates 11-1. * * * This was the fifth time this ATHLETICS 4, INDIANS 3 year that Mays has belted two KANSAS r'CIY - Al ,tj, hi- DETROIT VP) - Manager Bucky Harris of the Detroit Tigers blames his pitching staff for the club's current woes "Isn't it peculiar," Harris said, "that a staff which looked so good a month Fgo can look so bad right now." And it sure looks bad right now. Ned Garver, key man on the staff, hasn't won a start since June 7. Frank Lary's last starting vic- tory was June 8. Duke Maas has failed to win his last three starts. And that leaves only Steve Gro- mek, with an 8-5 record, and Billy Hoeft, with eight and three, showing any stuff among the starters. "I think we have reason to be- lieve things will improve," Harris declared. "At least we can hope so," he added. "It would seem that Lary is throwing too many pitches alike. His control still isn't good enough to put the ball just where he wants it every time - but then a pitcher as good as Ned Garver is having the same trouble this year. "Ned knows what he wants to do with the ball but he can't always get it to behave the way he wants. "These are things that a pitcher has to work out and I hope these men are able to do it," Harris said. Garver will be out to redeem himself when the club meets the third-place Chicago White Sox to- day for the first of two games. He'll face ex-Tiger Virgil Trucks who holds an 8-5 season record. Left fielder Jim Delsing prob- ably will be out of the Tiger lineup for both games. Delsing injured his back in a game at Kansas City last week. SOFTBALL SCORES Hayden 16, Cooley 7 Metallurgy 18, Hinsdale 6 Greene 11, Strauss 7 Triangle 9, Hard Rocks 0 BDA 11, Phi Chi 8 Phi Rho Sigma 10, Phi Delta Phi 9 SMajor League Standings "MISTER ROBERTS" * "THE LADY AND THE TRAMP" 1 "THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH" " "SEVEN LITTLE FOYS" - -_ "THE MAN FROM LARAMIE" " "LAND OF THE PHARAOHS" . MOVIES "YOU'RE NEVER TOO YOUNG" *" "MARTY" P:- OF "NOT AS A STRANGER" AND MANY IHERS MERIT Watch For Them In JULY and AUGUST?- i ' : : AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE W New York .....52 Chicago .......44 Cleveland .....46 Boston ........44 Detroit ........38 Kansas City ...34 Washington ...26 Baltimore.....21 YESTERDAY'S L Pct. GB 27 .658 - 30 .595 51/2 32 .590 51/2 35 .557 8 37 .507 12 42 .447 161/ 49 .347 24 53 .284 28Y RESULT W L Brooklyn ......55 23 Chicago .......44 36 Milwaukee .....40 36 Cincinnati .....36 37. New York .....38 40 St. Louis ......34 41 Philadelphia ...34 43 Pittsburgh .....27 52 Pct. .705 .550 .526 .493 .487 .453 .442 .342 GB 12 14 16%/ 17 19'2 201/ 28%/ II Dial 2-3136 Kansas City 4, Cleveland 3 Only game scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES New York at Baltimore (night) - --Ford (10-3) vs. Wilson (5- 8). Washington at Boston (2, twi- night)-Abernathy (1-1) and Porterfield (7-12) vs. Brewer (5-7) and Henry (1-1). Cleveland at K a n s a s City (night) - Score (7-6) or Houtteman (5-3) vs. Kellner (5-7). Chicago at Detroit - Trucks (8-5) vs. Garver (5-9). YESTERDAY'S RESULTS- Philadelphia 5, Brooklyn 4 New York 11, Pittsburgh 1 Cincinnati 5, St. Louis 4 TODAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at Pittsburgh (2, twi- night - Podres (7-5) and Erskine (8-4) vs. Law (4-3) and Face (0-1). St. Louis at Cincinnati (night) -Jackson (3-5) vs. Collum (7-2).. Milwaukee at Chicago-Conley (9-5) vs. Rush (5-4). Philadelphia at New York (night) - Simmons (4-5) vs. Hearn (7-8). 40*, i TONIGHT AT 8 Department of Speech Presents I ยง II