WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TAREE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1,1956 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T!UIEE League Leaders Defeated By Foes CLASSIFIEDS . . Dodgers Down Braves, 3-2; Redlegs Divide Twin Bill By The Associataed Press in the opener, while gaining his JERSEY CITY-Jackie Robin- first major league complete game son, returned to the Brooklyn and becoming the first Giant lineup in a minor shakeup by pitcher to go all the way since Manager Walt Alston, swatted a July 8. two-run homer in the second in- * * * ning, then singled in the tie-break- ing run in the ninth last night Cubs Phils 4 as the Dodgers defeated the Na- PHILADELPHIA-Monte Irvin tioasleDgeefeatedgthlwakeeNadrove in five runs with a home run, tional League leading Milwaukee single and double as the Chicago' BThes defeat leCubs defeated the Philadelphia The defeat left Milwaukee with Philies, 9-4, last night. only a two-game lead over the Chicago trailed 3-2 when it came runnerup Cincinnati Redlegs, who to bat in the fifth. Dee Fondy split a twi-night doubleheader with doubled and Walt Moryn walked. the New York Giants. Brooklyn'sdubdadWatMyn akd. Irvin then smashed his home run, third-place world champions push- finishing starting Philadelphia he Braves. within four games of pitcher Stu Miller. Robinson's single, his third hit * * * of the game, scored Peewee Reese, Cards 7, Pirates 0 who had singled to open the in- PITTSBURGH-Manager Bobby ning against reliefer Dave Jolly Bragan benched slumping first and then moved up to second on baseman Dale Long and shook up Duke Snider's sacrifice. his lineup drastically, but it all The Braves, who had whipped went for naught last night as the the Dodgers seven straight times, St. Louis Cardinals clobbered the had tied the count at 2-all in the skidding Pittsburgh Pirates, 7-0, top of the ninth on Eddie Math- sending them down to their sixth ews' 20th home run as Milwaukee traight defeat. got rid of righthander Carl Er- Veteran Murry Dickson, who skine. formerly pitched for the Pirates, The only other Milwaukee run scattered five singles. came in the second inning on Joe Adcock's 24th homer. - * * * Giants 5-3, Redlegs 1-7 NEW YORK-Ray Jablonski's three-run homer triggered a five- run fifth inning as Cincinnati bounced back to defeat New York, 7-3, last night after the last-place Giants had ended the Redlegs' five game winning streak, 5-1, in the dfirstgame of a twi-night doubleheader. The Redlegs led 2-1 going into the big fifth against lefthander Dick Littlefield, jumping out front on Roy McMillan's third homer in the first inning following a lead-h off single by Johnny Temple, who had three hits for the night. ,lookie southpaw Joe Margoneri RAY JABLONSKI allowed the Redlegs only five hits ... gives Redlegs split I d Hurt Pace-Setters W nn Blanks Yanks, 5-0; Tigers, Senators Cop Tilts i t 6 r r r 1 E By The Associataed Press CLEVELAND - Knuckleballer Early Wynn hurled a three-hit shutout last night as the Cleveland Indians beat the New York Yan- kees, 5-0. For the runnerup Indians, who had lost eight straight to the Yanks, it was their 6th victory in 16 games with the league leaders. Rookie Rocky Colavito, Cleve- land rightfielder, hit a homer in the seventh inning to start a two- run rally that drove Johnny Kucks from the mound. Only hits off Wynn were singles by Jerry Coleman, Yogi Berra and Mickey Mantle. Mantle struck out twice and walked in his other appearances tonight. The Indians scored three in the second on walks by Al Rosen and Colavito, a triple by Hal Naragon and a sacrifice fly by Chico Car- rasquel. * * * Tigers 6, Red Sox 4 DETROIT-Frank Lary pitched the Detroit Tigers to a four-hit victory over the Boston Red Sox last night and Al Kaline and Ray Boone cracked home runs in the Tigers' 6-4 triumph. Kaline batted across three runs JACKIE ROBINSON EARLY WYNN ... key to Braves' defeat . . shuts out Yankees SPORTS SHORTS: Lions Begin Practice ithout Six Holdouts with his 17th home run, a double and a single, and Boone had a triple and a single in addition to his 14th home run. Lary, winning his tenth game against 11 setbacks, walked only four men, but three of them scored. Senators 4, White Sox 3 CHICAGO - Dick Donovan wild-pitched home the decisive run last night as the Washington Sen- ators defeated the Chicago White Sox, 4 to 3. Lou Berberet, who had singled and reached third on a single by Pedro Ramos and an infield out, scored on Donovan's wild toss in the fourth inning. It was only the third game Don- ovan had lost to Washington in 11 decisions and he has lost them all to Ramos. The winner needed help from Bunky Stewart, however, The Nats scored three in the third. Jose Valdivielso walked and Ramos singled, taking an extra base on a fumble by Larry Doby. Whitey Herzog scored both with a slicing double to left and fol- lowed them home on Roy Sievers' single. A single by Dropo and a long double by Lollar brought Chicago within a run of a tie in the sixth, but Stewart took over to hold uthem scoreless the rest of the way. MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .75 1,87 2.78 3 .90 2.25 3.33 4 1.04 2.60 3.85 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 11:00 A.M. Saturday Phone NO 2-3241 WANTED TO RENT TWO MEDICAL students want small comfortably furnished apartment for coming two years, Near campus. NO 2-3339. )L GRADUATE STUDENT-Would like to rent a room or an apartment as of September. Prefers that Iitbe close to campus. If interested, write Louis J. Pansky, 2470 N. 50th St. Milwaukee, Wisconsin.)L HELP WANTED WANTED-A Radio-TV copywriter, Full time, Must type, No experience neces- sary. Call NO 2-5517.)H MATURE STUDENT COUPLE -- for house parent position in small men's international house. A child - wel- comed. Call NO 3-3220 for further in- formation,.)H APARTMENTS FOR RENT 4-ROOM furnished apartment, two bed- rooms and bath. 1223 S. State. Avail- able now. Accomodates four adults. No drinking, Utilities garage. Dial 3YP Ypsilanti 3-615xm. ROOM AND BOARD WANTED-Room and Board or bache- lor Apt. or room with kitchen privil- eges. Univ. Bus, Ad. instructor NO 31511, ext. 2857, 11:15-12 :15. ) E USED CARS 1941 CHRYSLER CONVERTABLE, me- chanically strong. Best offer. Call NO 3-8460,.)N BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING-Theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates, prompt service. 830 South Main, NO 8-7590. )J WASHINGS, finished work, ironing sep- arately! Specialize on cotton dresses, blouses, wash skirts. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone NO 2-9020. )J SITUATION WANTED SECOND World War Veteran wants per- manent night Janitor or night %atch- man work. Reliable. NO-2-9020. )S ROOMS FOR RENT CAMPUS APARTMsENTS, 3 and 4 Adults 3 and 4 Rooms, nicely decorated and furnished. Private bath. Call NO 2- 0035 or 8-6205, or 3-4594. }D FOR SALE 1948 PLYMOUTH, tudor, radio, beater. Good clean transportation. Dick Mil- ler, 106 Adams Hse. W, Quad. )1 GREAT DANE - Female 8 months, spayed. house-broken, fawn with black mask. $50 to good home. Call Plymouth 2945 days, 851r evenings. )B 1951 HOUSE TR AILER-3-rooms, Kit- chen, Living and Bedrooms. Com- pletely furnished, 30 ft. 2 bottle gas tanks, heated with fuel oil. Very good condition. $1,800 cash, NO-2-9020. )B PERSONAL WOMAN COMPANION wanted to share expenses and driving to Greensboro North Carolina or vicinity. References exchanged. Call NO 3-1358. )P YOUNG GRADUATE WOMAN--is look- ing for a roommate and a place to live near campus. Call NO 3-3575. )P By The Associataed Press YPSILANTI-Half a dozen De- troit Lions remained unsigned last night and General Manager Nick Kerbawy turned to night talks in an effort to get them into the pro football fold before formal prac- tice began today. Among those unsigned at night- fall were defensive back Jack Christiansen and veteran end Leon Hart. * * * Approve Tiger Sale DETROIT - The stockholder- trustees of the Detroit Baseball Co. yesterday formally approved the sale of the Detroit Tigers to a syndicate headed by Fred Knorr and John Fetzer, Michigan radio and television executives. The unanimous approval was one of the last formalities in the transfer of the club from a trust set up by Walter O. Briggs. The new owners will take over Oct. 1. Nashua's Next Race NEW YORK-Trainer Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons said yesterday Nashua would make his next start in the $100,000 Atlantic City Han- dicap Aug. 11, and skip the $50,- 000-added Brooklyn Handicap Sat- urday at Jamaica, He said the millionaire colt would not be allowed to carry more than 130 pounds in a race. Frank E. Jimmy Kilroe, han- dicapper for New York tracks, as- signed Nashua 132 pounds for the Mnile and one-quarter Brooklyn Saturday. Nashua won the Subur- ban with 128, the Monmouth Han-7 dicap with 129, both at a mile and' one-quarter. Senior Amateur Golf Tourney E NEW YORK-The U.S. Golf As- sociation reported yesterday a total of 284 entries for the second Senior Amateur Championships, to be cutt to 120 players by 18 hole sectional qualifying rounds in 25 cities. The championship proper will be held at the Somerset Country Club, St. Paul, Minn., Aug. 20-25. * * * Garver Disabled DETROIT - Ned Garver, ailing righthander of the Detroit Tigers, was placed on the disabled list yes- terday for the second time this season. Garver has pitched in only five games for a total of 14%l/ innings. He will be out of action 30 days, effective last Monday. Read Daily Classifieds Orioles 5, A's I KANSAS CITY-The Baltimore Orioles posted their seventh vic- tory of the season without a defeat in Kansas City last night, defeat- ing the Athletics, 5-1, behind the 6-hit pitching of Hector "Skinny" Brown. Brown, a right-hander, ran his record to 7-2, striking out two and allowing only two bases on balls. He ran into trouble in the ninth, giving up singles to Lou Skizas and Harry Simpson, but George Zuver- ink saved the day by forcing Eddie Robinson to bounce into a double play. SALINE MILL THEATRE US 112-2 Mile West of Saline "THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS" Admission $1.65 Curtain 8:30 Telephone Saline 31 for Reservations SIAMESE CAT Stud Service. Registered. Mrs. Peterson's Cattery. NO 2-9020. )J Major League Standings I DICK DONOVAN . goat for White Sox AMERICAN RACE ENDED? AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct1 New York 67 31 .684 Cleveland 57 39 .594 Boston 53 44 .546 Chicago 48 45 .516 Baltimore 45 53 .459 Detroit 45 53 .459 Washington 39 60 .394 Kansas Ctiy 34 63 .351 TODAY'S GAMES NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 9 132 16/ 22 22 28% 32Y-, Milwaukee Cincinnati Brooklyn St. Louis Philadelphia Pittsburgh Chicago New York W L Pet 57 35 .620 58 40 .592 55 41 .573 47 47 .500 45 52 .464 43 52 .453 41 54 .432 33 58 .363 GB 2 4 11 14% 15 17 23'?z Interest Centered on Nati By WHITNEY MARTIN Associated Press Sports Writer ~ C I New York at Cleveland (N) Boston at Detroit Washington at Chicago Baltimore at Kansas City (N) TODAY'S GAMES Milwaukee at Brooklyn (N) Cincinnati at New York Chicago at Philadelphia (N) St. Louis at Pittsburgh (N) Hard rocks Trounce Hospital, 9-1, To Move into I Softball Finals Hardrocks trounced Hospital, 9- 1, last night at South Ferry Field to move into the championship finals of the summer I-M soft- ball program. Following a night's rest, the Hardrocks-winners of two' games in two nights-will take on the Senior Meds tomorrow evening for the intramural crown. The game, scheduled for seven innings in- stead of the usual six, will begin at 6:30 p.m. Bosker Hurls Two-Hitter Last night Don Bosker of the Hardrocks hurled a neat two- hitter and his teammates backed him up witha hefty hitting at- tack to eliminate the Hospital squad-winners' of League One-. from the championship playoffs. Three runs in the first inning gave the Hardrocks a lead that was never threatened. Bosker will be pitted tomorrow night against the hurling star of the summer. Bob Visser will be on the mound for the Senior Meds with a record of allowing only three hits in 28 innings of pitching. Only the Hornets in Monday night's semi-finals managed to solve his deliveries for any hits. } They also tallied the only run against him for the summer. Vis- ser is undefeated, while Bosker has lost only once in seven games. F> Two other games were played lat night in League Four which is not participating in the I-M playoffs. Psychology's 'A's' Bill McKeachie lost his first game of the season when VRC scored five runs in the last of the sixth inning to win, 5-4. McKeachie had allowed only one hit over the first five frames, but weakened to give up six in the fatal last inning. Metallurgy piled up an early lead and coasted to a 20-5 triumph over Astronomy in the other League Four contest. Tonight two games are schedul- ed. Second place and consolation round titles will be decided in seven inning affairs. Lloyd meets BDA for the second place crown, while Alpha Chi Sigma battles Bacteri- ology for the consolation champ- ionship. NEW YORK - For no particu- lar reason except our own amaze- ment we feel inclined to make a clinical report of the major league races. Sort of take the temperatures of the clubs, you might say, al- though from a glance at the standings you know the only team really running a fever is the Yan- kees. The last time we checked the progress, or lack of same, of the teams was at the time of the All- Star game. In the three weeks since then some amazing things have happened, gwith the most amazing of all the abrupt decline of the Chicago White Sox. Sox Drop Badly On July 11 they still were at least theoretical contenders, only 6%f games from the top. Shortly before that they were only about a game behind the Yankees, and looking very formidable indeed. Before yesterday the Yanks' lead was 10 games and the White Sox were trailing by 161f2. Although the White Sox record is the more notable, because they had been so-called contenders three weeks ago, the fact remains that every club has dropped far- ther behind the New Yorkers over the period. American Race 'Dead' So it is pretty obvious that the American League race is as dead as a herring, with the Yankees; holding the edge in the season's series to date with all their rivals, and showing no signs of easing up. But the National League race! Ah, there were have something to keep the interest throbbing. The three teams which were in a dogfight for the lead three weeks ago still are in a dogfight, although the lead has changed. Redlegs Had Led On July 11 the Cincinnati Reds were in first place 11/2 games over Milwaukee and two games over Brooklyn. St. Louis and Pitts- burgh were tied for fourth, eight games off the pace. Both the Cardinals and Pirates have faded badly. The Pirates have dropped 141/2 games behind. Milwaukee went on a winning binge to take over the lead, and just a week ago Monday was six games ahead of the third-place Brooklyns. Still in Contention Cincinnati, although relinquish- ing the top spot and seemingly headed for a nose dive after drop- anal League ping three straight to the Dodgers, reassembled themselves and swept their five-games series with the Pirates and are right in the middle of the battle. By thetime this reaches print the Reds, Dodgers and Braves may have switched around like they were playing musical chairs, as the Dodgers, who gained two games last week, presently are en- gaging in a stirring series with the Braves, and the Reds taking on the Giants, who have been a source of concern only to their loyal followers. G C nU.SA-23--South Of Pkard Rd TONIGHT AT 8 Department of Speech Presents Christopher Fry's THE LADY'S NOT FOR BURNING $1.50-$1.10-- 75c LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE . Famous SEMI-ANNUAL SALE of Fine Fashions ! All from our regular stock, It is mid-summer to you but to us it's getting ready for Fall and we must clear our racks for new Fall stock. Dresses . . . Suits . . . Coats . . . Sportswear and Accessories at one-half and more off. Extraordinary values in wide hoice of season- al merchandise. I ENDING TODAY Segregation Law To Cause No Change of Tourney Locale NEW ORLEANS ()-The Sugar Bowl announced yesterday if its annual basketball tournament is held it will be staged in New Or- leans "and not transferred to any other locale." Paul E. DeBlanc, president of the Mid-Winter Sports Assn., sponsors of the annual Sugar Bowl Carnival of Sports, made the an- nouncement after a meeting of the association's basketball commit- tee. Notre Dame, Dayton and St. Louis universities, o r i g i n a 11 y scheduled to play in the annual tournament Dec. 28-29, announced their withdrawal Saturday because of the Louisiana law which for- bids Negroes and whites from com- peting against each other in ath- letic events. The law takes effect Oct. 15. Kentucky, the fourth tourna- ment team, announced it would remain a contender. DeBlanc's announcement yester- day followed reports the basket- ball tournament had been invited to transfer to Louisville, Chicago, St. Louis "and other points." "There are no further develop- ments at this time," DeBlanc said. Only 147 days to Christmas TERRIFIC BARGAINS Now all over Town DIAL 2-3136 For Program Information L- a I Coming Friday DEAN MARTIN & JERRY LEWIS in "PARDNERS" America's Foremost Negro Dancer ma Colorful Recital of Primitive Rhythms The University of Michigan Summer Session presents x _ I--- fI Groups of fine wool Coats and Suits originally 39.95 to 65, now from 19.98 to 29.95. Y'W I' I r, T I us, !: 1 .- Better dresses of every kind including evening cocktail and bridesmaid dresses or- iginally to 49.95 at %. Budget Dresses and Cot- tons,. . 2 groups 7.00 and 10.00 .. , many originally to 29.95. Linen and Faille Coats at 10.00 and Duster 14.98. ection 4. Modern Coa ipcg r' DIAL NO 2-2513 Eves. Only 7-9 P.M. ON STAGE! IN PERSON! We're headed right now for the Golden -Apples Room. There we'll have that wonderful Smorgas- bord . . . a "specialty of I Group of Summer Hand- bags-straws, plastics and Leathers originally 2.95 to 10.95. Nylon Blouses, sizes 32-44 . . . No-iron cotton slips, originally 5.95 . . Hundreds of pieces of cos- tume jewelry and rings, or- ;ninnr, 1 00nl * 1) All summer hats 5.00 originally ... 12.95. at the S.U. campus togs- Dozens of Separates, Skirts, Halters, Blouses, Shorts, 1.49 3.95 to to . . . . . . . . ... ......* ~ :~4 C II I I _ = _ m I i III p