THE MTC ~IGAN DAILY'AI! T 'PAGE TI NL Nets 6 -5 All-Star Vi tory TIrAbELRHlEE CONLEY CREDITED WITH WIN: Musial's Homerun in 12th Tops Rally 4 J IBerra Berates, Musial MV1uses in Retrospections U> MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .66 1.47 2.15 3 .77 1.95 3.23 4 .99 2.46 4.30 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 11:00 A.M. Saturday Phon e NO 2-3241 II BUSINESS SERVICES HI-Fl MILWAUKEE (R)) - Stan "The Man" Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals lined a 375-foot home run into the right field bleachers on the first pitch of the bottom half of the 12th inning yesterday to give the National League a 6-5 comeback victory over the American in the 22nd All-Star game. Musial's smash set an All-Star record for it was his fourth in 12 games, the most ever played by any man since the late Arch Ward dreamed up the series back in 1933. Until he broke up the ball game, Musial hadn't had a hit. Nationals Rally Trailing 5-0 as late as the seven- th inning, the Nationals clawed back to win after they had been " counted out. Mickey Mantle's tre- mendous 425-foot blast into "Peri- ni's Woods" in center field with two men on climaxed a four-run spurt by the Americans in the first inning. Sensational clutch pitching by Cincinnati's Joe Nuxhall and Mil- waukee's Gene Conley, the ulti- mate winner, stifled the Americans while the Nationals closed the series gap to 13-9 in favor of the American., Musial's winning blow provided a smashing climax to Milwaukee's first taste of All-Star play. Conley Garners Win Conley, the towering 6-8 right- hander who has won 11 games for the home town Braves, had just taken up the pitching burden in the 12th inning. At the end of the second extra inning game in the series history, Box Score AMERICAN A, Kuenn, ss .........3 Carrasquel, ss ......3 Fox, 26 ............3 Avila, 2b ............1 illiams, If ........3 Smith, If .... ....1 Mantle, f -...... 6 Berra, c ....... .6 Kaline, rf ...........4 Vernon, lb .......s.5 Finigan, 3b ........3 Rosen, 3b ........2 Pierce, p..........0 b Jensen ...........1 Wnp ...... .0 g Power ............1 Ford, P-...........1 Sullivan, p.........1 Totals ...........44 manager Leo Durocher had used everybody in his 25-man squad except Luis Arroyo, the St. Louis lefty. He had to let pitchers bat for themselves in the late stages. Conley Struck Out Side Conley, who had worked a full nine-inning game Sunday, simply threw the ball past the opposition in his one-inning stand. Detroit's Al Kaline, y Washington's Mickey Vernon and Cleveland's Al Rosen all struck out. After that bit of inspirational work, Musial stepped to the plate to face Boston's Frank Sullivan, the fourth American League pitch- er. One pitch, one home run. It was as simple as that. Errors Prove Costly A costly error by Chicago's Chico Carrasquel who fumbled a ground- er and then threw away the ball, trying for a force play, cost the Americans a run in the seventh. Another error, by Rosen, who let Kaline's throw get through him at third base, permitted the Cubs' Ransom Jackson to score the tying run in the eighth. In each case there were two out before the Nationals scored. Terrific Clout by Mantle Mantle's 425-foot homer with two men on base in the first inning looked like the ball game until the Natinals came out of their daze. Mickey's screaming hit' cleared a double fence and rolled toward the cluster of trees, planted by Milwaukee owner Lou Perini to give the hitters a better back- ground. One run already had scored on a wild pitch by Philadelphia's Rob- in Roberts before the New York Yankee centerfielder connected to complete a four-run innlg. AL Garners Fifth Run The American lead was stretched to 5-0 in the sixth on a combina- tion of a single by Yanke.e Yogi Berra, a double by Kaline and an infield out by Mickey Vernon of Washington. The double by Kaline was a hot smash off the left wrist of Eddie Mathews, Milwaukee third base- man, that bounced into left field. Mathews left the game in the next inning for a trip to the hospital where X-rays of the wrist showed he had escaped a fracture. Billy, Pierce, the slick Chicago lefty, gave up only one hit, a lead-off single by St. Louis' Red Schoendienst, in the first three innings. He faced only nine men because Schoendienst was caught trying to advance on a ball that got away from Berra. Mays Starts Rally Willie Mays, the hotshot of the 1954 world champion New York Giants, started the National rally off with a single in the seventh. The next two men flied out be- fore Hank Aaron, of Milwaukee walked. Johnny Logan, another Milwau- kee Brave, finally broke the Amer- ican's shutout bid with a single, scoring Mays. When Carrasque fumbled a ground ball by pinch hitter Stan Lopata of the Phillies and then threw wild trying to force I-M SOFTBALL SCORES Phi Chi 14, Phi Rho Sigma 11 Hard Rocks 10, Phi Delta Phi 5 Triangle 17, BDA 9 Metallurgy 15, Hayden 2 Greene 18, Cooley House 11 Hinsdale defeated Strauss (for- feit) Logan at second, Aaron also scor- ed. Three in the eighth tied the score for the Nationals with the help of four hits and another er- ror, this time by Rosen. Kaline Misplays 'Big Klu' Once again there were two out before things started to pop. Mays singled to right and Kluszewski singled to the same field. Right fielder Kaline, fearing a homer, was playing deep, and wasn't able to reach Klu's hit that fell at his feet. Jackson grounded a single to right, scoring Mays with his second run. Whitey Ford, the Yankee left- hander who took over from Wynn in the seventh with a 5-0 lead, was replaced by Sullivan at that point with the score 5-3, two on and two out. Aaron came through with his second hit, also to right, driving in the big Cincy first base- man. When Kaline's jhrow to third, trying for Jackson, got away from Rosen and rolled to the stands, Jackson also pounded home with the tying run. Only a brilliant play by Carrasquel on Logan's smash prevented further trouble. MILWAUKEE (A')-It was a bit- ter and disgusted bunch of play- ers in the American League All- Stars' clubhouse but the bitterest was Yogi Berra and the most dis- gusted was Whitey Ford, his pitching mate of the New York Yankees. Most of the athletes were hur- riedly getting into their street clothes, anxious to get out of there and board trains or planes for points elsewhere. Berra, however, was stomping around in front of his locker, muttering under his breath. Ford, who was whacked in the 6-5, 12- iniing loss to the Nationals, sat disconsolately on his stool, for the most part looking into space. "They're supposed to be power hitters," grumbled Berra to no- body in particular. "I didn't see any power. All I saw was bloops. Yah, that's what those guys are -a bunch of bloop hitters. They only got one extra base hit-Klu's double-until Musial hit that ho- mer. We gave them the game." Ford, who yielded the first five runs to the Nationals in 1% in- nings of pitching, was the most unconsolable. R 1 0 1 0 0 I 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0. 0 0 0 5 HT 1 2 1 0 1 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 MILWAUKEE (P)-"The right man did it!" That was the exclamation of National League president War- ren Giles as he thumped Stan Musial on the back for his 12th inning homer which broke up the All-Star game. It also voiced the sentiment of the entire whooping National League dressing room in which Musial completely stole the spot- light. A jubilant Lippy Durocher, manager of the victorious Na- tionals, joked that he ordered Musial to hit the decisive homer because he had nearly exhausted his bench. One NL Reserve Left Only pitcher Luis Arroyo of the St. Louis Cardinals was left for service when Musial stroked his homer. off Frank Sullivan's first pitch in the 12th. Musial accepted wholesale con- gratulations in a modest fashion, explaining that he was swinging "just to get on" in the 12th. "Before that," said Musial, who entered the game as a reserve in the fourth inning, "I was really swinging for the fences. I didn't take a vicious cut at Sullivan's pitch in the 12th. It was a fast ball, letter high. But when I con- nected, I knew it was over the fence." Durocher Nearly Speechless Durocher, momentarily, was left speechless after his triumphant squad swarmed into the National dressing room. "It was a wonderful thing, as good a game as you'd want to see." Then the Lip began warming up oratorically. "I have had 'four All-Star squads," said Durocher, "and this one really was something. They were like a bunch of college kids on the bench. When we went four runs, then five down, it didn't squelch them a bit. They kept up bench chatter like a football team." Durocher had high praise for lanky Gene Conley, the Milwaukee Braves pitcher, who struck out the American League side in the 12th and was credited with the victory. ForyConley, It was a goat to hero All-Star role in two years. Last year, he was charged with defeat as he pitched a home run ball to Larry Doby. Andrews Boxes Charles Tonite CHICAGO (R)-Paul Andrews of Buffalo, N. Y., will yield several pounds and considerable experi- ence to Ezzard Charles when the two meet tonight' in a 10-round bout at Chicago Stadium. Andrews, who is rated sixth in the 175-pound division, has had only 35 fights and lost 5 of them. The scrap, which will be tele- vised nationally at 8 p.m. CST on ABC, mainly is a test for Andrews' youth and his knockout-laden right against a 34-year-old cam- paigner who has 103 fights under his belt and held the heavyweight crown before being dethroned, by Jersey Joe Walcott in 1951. LOST AND FOUND FOUND-Esterbrook fountain pen, be- hind Congregational Church and Betsy Barbour. Call 3-8146 from 6 to 9. )5A FOUND-small blue pecil purse con- taining keys, N. Univ. and Forest, NO 3-15'31, Ext. 253. )4A PERSONAL SPECIAL RATES-on TIME magazine, 12 wks. for $1, 26 for $2. Call NO 3- 8146. )F ABSOLUTELY lowest prices available to students for Time, Life, Sat. Eve. Post, etc., from Student Periodical. NO 2-3061. )3F FOR SALE SIAMESE-Seal pointe kittens with pa- pers. Stud service. Call Peterson's NO 2-9020. )4B I'M QUITTING photography. Selling 16 magazines Kodachrome 16 mm movie film $4.75 each or $70 for the lot. Save $2.20 on one and $41.20 on lot. R. J. Swanson, 1332 Sheehan. NO 3-5958 aft.. er 5 P.M. )8B REMINGTON QUIET-RITER-Ideal for all kinds of typing. Bought four weeks ago. Very little use. Costs $124. Sells $95. Student leaving country soon. Call NO 2-9205 after 7 P.M., or weekdays all day. )9B EQUITY IN 40-foot housetrailer. 2-bed- room, full bath and kitchen; wall-to- wall carpeting, etc. Must sell before Sept. 1. Call Yps 5421J. )10B OFFICE EQUPMENT for eye, ear, nose and throat doctors, including: chair, table, instrument cabinet, desk, ther opeutic machine, instruments, white gowns, seven (7) volumes of "Opera- tion and Surgery" by Bickham, fifteen (15) volumes of the encyclopedia Med- ical Surgery and Specialty," and other books. 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Phone 3-2065. )30 r...__.._._ 2 pair $11.00, NATIONAL AB R H Schoehdlenst, 2b .. .6 0 2 Ennis, If............1 0 0 eMusial, ef.-.........4 1 1 Snider, of ..........2 0 0 Mays, cf ..........3 2 2 Kluszewski, lb.....5 1 2 Mathew s,3b.......2 0 0 Jackson, 3b .......3 1 1 Mueller, rf .........2 0 1 d Aaron, rf .........2 1 2 Banks, ss .........2 0 0 Logan, ss ..........3 0 1 Crandall, c .........1 0 0 e Burgess;-c ........1 0 0 It Lopata, c ........3 0 0 Roberts, p ..........0 0 0 a Thomas .......,..1 0 0 Haddix, p ....,......0 0 0 f Hodges ...........1 0 1 Newcombe, p .......0 0 0 i Baker............1 0 0 Jones, p ..........0 0 0 Nuxhall, p ...,..... 2 0 0 Conley, p .........,0 0 0 Totals..........45 6 13 a-Popped out for Roberts in 3rd b-Popped out for Pierce in 4th c-Struck out for Ennis in 4th d-Ran for Mueller in 5th e-Hit into force play for Cran- dall in 5th f-Singled for Haddix in 6th g-Popped out for Wynn in 7th h-Safe on error for Burgess in 7th i-Flied out for Newcombe in 7th Amer. .400 001000000-5 10 2 Nats. ..000 000 230 001-6 13 1 ET&TE BERT THOMAS is greeted by his wife, Marion, and daughter, Sharon, 11, at Victoria, B.C., after swimming the Strait of Juan de Fuca from Port Angeles, Wash., to Victoria. The 275 pounder, an ex-marine, took 11 hours to complete the 18-mile swim to be the first to successfully cross the strait. Big League Homerun Records In Jeopard at Midseason $5 95 pair '., FREE CUFF ALTERATIONS .NEW YORK (A)-Major league home run hitters, starting a three- day respite Monday from their regular season slugging, will shat- ter the existing records for both circuits if they continue their pace in the second half of the cam- paign. Figures compiled by The Asso- ciated Press reveal that a total of 1,268 homers were hit up to the "All-Star break" with National League batters accounting for 717 and American League players for 551. An aggregate of 1,112 home runs was walloped in as many games last season, when the National wound up with 1,114 and the A- merican with 823. The National League record is 1,197 established in 1953 and its current crop of fearsome sluggers is well ahead of that year when 645 four-baggers were on the books around All-Star time. The American League mark of 973 was set in 1950. This season's junior circuit' pace is only seven behind the one in '50. * ASSORTED COLORS SAM'S STORE I FIRST AMERICAN FILM TO WIN THE COVETED GRAND PRIZE AT THE INTERNATIONAL $Y FLFETVAL IN ANNES SI " MARTY makes such beautiful music."--Irving Berlin Make room ''for my friend MARTY t He's tops!' -Danny Thomas 1 i " aQ I rdo - "Rerfectionz 4n Modern Cooling " I -1 . I TONIGHT Red aripet 122 E. Washington Sam J. Benjamin, '27 Lit., Owner SHOWN AT 9 P.M. ONLY PREVIEW TONIGHT Along with our regular show we are privileged tonight to present an advance preview of one of the most unusual and heart-warming movies of this or any other year The star you'll be seeing in the-surprse role of his career creates feelings.and emotions far from his usual stock in trade, We cannot reveal the title of the picture or the, name, of the star. But when you see the-o you'll know why we're so happy to present them. And you'll be so happy you czmel Come either 7 or 9 P.M. See both Preview and Regular Feature. SUMMER DIRECORIE // STILL AVAILABLE I at the, He's your kind of guy.. in your kind of picture! :, ::. w 1 5 }?h ,-lL x w T'f 'wVxl'": n .. . EIS a ~ m ~L 5~M ST3TT~>II U - Ee .. ~AIRC