THURSDAY, AUGUST 2,1956 E MICHIGAN DAIL'Y' PAGE TFIRER THURSDAY, AUGUST 2,1958 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ThREe Yanks, Braves Drop Second in Row CLASSIFIEDS Lemon of Indians Defeats American League Leaders Yesterday's Honor Roll Brooklyn Edges Milwaukee On Mitchell's Pinch Single By The Associated Press CLEVELAND - Bob Lemon pitched the Cleveland Indians to a 5-1 victory over the New York Yankees last night, aided by four double plays. The 35-year-old righthander gave up six hits, missing a shut- out on a fifth-inning homer by Hank Bauer. It was the Indians' second straight victory over the Yanks, and cut New York's lead to eight games. The Indians scored all their runs in the first two innings off. Tommy Byrne. Rip Coleman and Mickey McDermott blanked the Indians the rest of the way. * * * Red Sox 5, Tigers 4j t DETROIT - Tom Brewer won his 15th game as Ted Williams and1 Jackie Jensen hit home runs to account for all the Boston Red tATMajor League Standings ' NATIONAL LEAGUE Sox' scoring yesterday in a 5-4 decision over the Detroit Tigers. Brewer, who has lost only three, needed a sparkling ninth-inning reliefchore from Tommy Hurd to beat down a late Tiger rally. Hurd, taking over with the bases loaded and one out, struck out slugger Charley Maxwell and got Al Kaline on a routine fly to left field. Williams blasted a three-run homer in the first inning off Paul Foytack. Jensen's home run came in the seventh behind a single by Mickey Vernon and iced the contest. Held to a pair of singles for five innings, the Tigers reached Brew- er for two runs in the sixth on a single by Earl Torgeson, a triple by Maxwell and a single by Kaline. Detroit added one in the eighth on Maxwell's home run. Senators 6, White Sox 2 CHICAGO -- The Washington Nats, forced into overtime by Sam Esposito's home run, rallied for four runs in the 10th yesterday afternoon to give Chuck Stobbs a 6-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox. Stobbs gave up nine hits in de- feating the Sox for the fourth time this season. Jim Wilson, who had yielded only seven hits for nine innings, was knocked out in the 10th and lost the game. Each side had scored an un- earned run early in the game and the Nats had a 2-1 lead on Jim Leomn's homer until Esposito's smash tied things up. A's 9, Orioles 4 KANSAS CITY - The Kansas City Athletics shelled three Oriole pitchers for 12 hits last night and defeated Baltimore, 9-4. It was the first Athletic victory over the Orioles in eight games here and only the fourth in the 17 games the teams have played. BOB LEMON . . hurls victory over Yanks DALE MITCHELL . . . Dodger addition comes through By The Associated Press BROOKLYN - Dale Mitchell, who joined Brooklyn from Cleve- land just 24 hours earlier, beat out a pinch-hit infield chopper to drive in the tie-breaking run for the Dodgers in the eighth inning last night, beating Milwaukee, 2-1, and hoisting the third-place Dodg- ers to within three games of the National League leading Braves. The defeat left Milwaukee with a two-game lead over second-place Cincinnati. The high bouncer to third base- man Ed Mathews, which the 35- year-old Mitchell just did beat out, knocked out a brilliant pitching job by righthander Lew Burdette, who struck out 10 while taking his sixth defeat in 18 decisions. Clem Labine won his second in as many nights, coming on in relief of Sal Maglie when the Braves tied it one-all in the seventh inning. * * * Giants 3, Redlegs 1 NEW YORK - Ruben Gomez limited Cincinnati to one hit in seven innings, and contributed a vital two-bagger that started the New York Giants on a two-run rally in the seventh inning to down the Redlegs, 3-1, yesterday afternoon at the Polo Grounds. The second-place Redlegs were limited to another single after Milwaukee Cincinnati Brooklyn St. Louis Philadelphia Pittsburgh Chicago New York TODAY'S W L Pct GB 57 36 .613 - 58 41 .586 2 56 41 .577 3 48 47 .505 10 46 52 .469 13% 43 53 .448 15V2~ 41 55 .427 17Y, 34 58 .370 221 GAMES Gomez was forced to retire in the seventh. Gomez led off the Giants' sev- enth with a double but pulled a muscle in his left shoulder sliding into second. Don Mueller singled, breaking a 1-1 deadlock, anti went to third on Red Schoendienst's two-bagger. Willie Mays was purposely passed to fill the bases, and Johnny Klippstein was replaced on the Cincinnati mound by Joe Nuxhall. Bill White's sacrifice fly scored Mueller with an extra tally. Mary Grissom replaced Gomez at the start of the Redlegs' eighth, and allowed a two-out single to Stan Palys in that inning. * * 4' Cards 4, Pirates 1 PIT'SBURG H -- Willa r d Schmidt gave up only six hits last night in pitching the St. Louis Cardinals to a 4-1 triumph over Pittsburgh's punchless Pirates, who went down to their seventh consecutive defeat. The Cards, helped by two errors, sewed up the contest in the second inning with two runs. In the seventh the Cards scored their other two runs on a two-out triple by Stan Musial. The Pirates' lone tally came in the second when the Pirates got three of their hits. Phils 10, Cubs 8 PHILADELPHIA - A home run with the bases loaded in the seventh inning by Willie Jones en- abled the Philadelphia Phillies to come from behind and defeat the Chicago Cubs, 10-8, last night Robin Roberts, pitching three innings of relief, earned his 12th victory of the season. Trailing, 6-4, the Phils rallied for five runs in the seventh to salt the game away. Richie Ashburn, Mary Blaylock and Stan Lopata singled for the first run. After a sacrifice and an intentional pass, Jones planted his 11th home run of the season in the upper left field stand. For Jones, it was the sixth grandslammer of his career. COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING! for all the family * 11 BARBERS f AIR-CONDITIONED The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre WANTED TO RENT TWO MEDICAI 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 ritbe close to campus. If interested, write Louis .. 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. )S 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 TRIUMPH TR2 -- 1955, several extras, $1,900. NO 2-8205. )N 1941 CHRYSLER CONVERTABLE, me- chanically strong. Best offer. Call NO 3-8460.)N SITUATION WANTED SECOND World War Veteran wants per- manent night janitor or night watch- man work. Reliable. NO-2-9020. )S ROOMS FOR RENT CAMPUS APARTMENTS, 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 BUSINESS SERVICES WASHINGS, finished work, ironing sep- aratelyl Specialize on cotton dresses, blouses, wash skirts. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone NO 2-9020. )J SIAMESE CAT Stud Service. Registered. AMrs. Peterson's Cattery, NO 2-9020. )J FOR SALE 1948 PLYMOUTH. tudor. radio, heater. Good clean transportation. Dick Mil- ler, 106 Adams Hse. W. Quad. )B GREAT DANE- - Female 8 months, spayed. hotise-broken, fawn with black mask. $50 to good home. Call Plymouth 2945 days. Bsr evenings. )B 1951 HOUSE TRAILER-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. )F YOUNG GRADUATE WOMAN-is look- ing for a roommate and a place to live near campus. Call NO 3-3575. )F CARS FOR RENT AVIS RENT-A-CAR or VAN for local or long distance use. Reasonable. Daily, weekly or hourly rates. Nye Motor Sales Inc. 514 E. Washington St. NO- 3-4156. Read and Use Daily Classifieds JACK JENSEN . Red Sox margin of victory RUBEN GOMEZ .. . near perfect pitching Milwuakee at Brooklyn Cindinnati at New York St. Louis at Pittsburgh (Only games scheduled.) AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet ATHLETIC CODE STUDIED: Big Ten. Meets To Discuss Policy New York Cleveland Boston Chicago Baltimore Detroit Washington Kansas City 67 58 54 48 45 45 40 35 32 39 44 46 54 54 60 63 .677 .598 .551 .511 .455 .455 .400 .357 GB 8 12q4 16Y2 22 22 271 i 31 2 CHICAGO WA~-The Big Ten, ruffled by a national magazine's charges of purported loose con- ference athletic practices, will meet this weekend to consider a "standard" code for financing athletes through college. Saturday's and Sunday's special session on athletic policy was scheduled long before a story, I written for the current issue of TODAY'S GAMES Washington at Chicago Baltimore at Kansas City Boston at Detroit New York at Cleveland BDA Captures I-M Second Place Title; Bacteriologists Con Consolation Finals _ - -. .., .., ., .. BDA copped the second place playoff title and Bacteriology won the consolation round finals in last night's I-M softball games at South Ferry Field. x First place finals between Hard- rocks and Senior Meds will be played Monday night, weather per- mitting. Five Runs in First BDA scored five big runs in the Sports By The Associated Press SYRACUSE, N. Y. - Harold Carter of Linden, N. J., literally punched veteran Bob Satterfield all over the ring last night, stop- ping the Chicago boxer in 2:59 of the fifth of a scheduled 10-round- er. Carter put his opponent down. three times in the fifth to win by the automatic three-knockdowns in one round rule. * * * r bottom of the first inning and coasted to a 7-3 victory over Lloyd. BDA exploded for its tallies with two on and two out. A walk by Lloyd pitcher Bob Johns loaded the bases. The next batter doubled and left-fielder Wenket powered a three run blast to wrap up the victory. Bob Schlea's two-run homer in Shorts Another undefeated fighter, young Eddie Machen of Redding, Calif., was boosted from 10th to 8th among the heavyweights. He racked up his 15th victory in stop- ping Nino Valdes, the Cuban giant, in eight rounds. Light heavyweight champion Archie Moore was awarded "fighter of the month" honors by Ring Editor Nat Fleischer for his easy conquest of James J. Parker of Canada. *' * * Fan Complains to Giles PHILADELPHIA - A Philadel- phia baseball fan wrote National League President Warren Giles yesterday complaining about lan- guage used by two Chicago Cub players which he described as "un- printable" and which contained "the vilest names I have ever heard anywhere." John Taxin, restaurant owner, said the incident occurred Tuesday night while he was sitting in a Connie Mack Stadium box with his wife and son and some friends. He identified the players as Dee Fondy and Don Hoak, both in- fielders. the fifth inning accounted for tWvo of Lloyd's trio of runs. BDA hurler Fred Purcell gave up only six hits. Bacteriology Wins Bacteriology edged Alpha Chi Sigma, 13-12, in a free-hitting slugfest. Bacteriology struck first with three runs in the bottom of the third. Alpha Chi Sigma man- aged to tie the score by the fifth inning. Then the fireworks started. Bac- teriology came up with five tallies in the bottom of the fifth. Alpha Chi Sigma matched Bacteriology's five and added three more in an eight run sixth. In the bottom of the seventh Bacteriology came up with four runs to win, Rally for Victory Bacteriology's rally started with a homer by Jerry Borman. Al Carlin walked, Bob Reed singled, Jim Patterson singled, pitcher John Vennes singled in the tying run, and Marcel Pons singled in the winning run. Any teams wishing to continue playing I-M softball after the sea- son ends officially Monday are requested to contact Intramural Director Earl Riskey at the I-M building. 6588 Jackson Rd. Last Time Tonight JANE RUSSELL in "THE REVOLT OF MAMIE STOVER" and "A KILLER IS LOOSE" Look magazine, hung a "football scandal" label on Big Ten aid to athletes. 'No Condemnation' A Conference spokesman, who declined to be identified, asserted yesterday that the Look item, cit- ing "full-ride" scholarships for football players and other al- leged irregularities, proved no condemnation of the Big Ten. Officials at Michigan had ear- lier described the magazine's ar- ticle as "sensationalistic" and "very exaggerated." Michigan's actions in granting aid to all- America end Ron Kramer had re- ceived much attention in the story. However, these actions had been investigated and cleared by Big Ten Commissioner Kenneth "Tug" Wilson. The Conference spokesman de- clared that for the past decade the Big Ten has made no bones about trying to help athletes through school with measured financial help, but only if they were aca- demically worthy. Depends on Grades This help takes the form of tui- tion payment if an athlete main- tains a C averageror in excess of tuition for a better than C mark. Jobs also help the aspiring Big Ten athlete, although this has become a touchy point because of the time available for such em- ployment during a particular sports season. The Conference spokesman said that a report by a special coma mittee, which for seven months has been studying Big Ten athlet- ic practices, could possibly call for a "sort of union scale" for ath- letes. Same Rules for All Such a plan would suggest that each of the 10 Conference mem- bers would face the same require- ments for awarding grants-in-aid or jobs. At present, interpretation of scholarship standards vary at the different schools. Jobs for athletes also have been at a school's discretion. Bill Reed, assistant Big Ten commissioner, said the weekend Chicago meeting of faculty repre- sentatives and athletic directors, would consider the report of the special committee on athletic practices, but that any decisive ac- tion would be delayed. If a decision is made to revise the Conference code, such legis- lation would come under the so- called White Resolution which re- quires 60-day study and approval or disapproval by each member. John Wayne Architecture Auditorium 50C Maureen O'Hara Cintema quild* THURSDAY and FRIDAY at 7 and 9 "THE QUIET MAN" with ... Clearance Final 3T&TEK i SPORT CORTS i i # I University of Michigan Summer Session presents PEARL PRIMUS ENDING TODAY r- Hart Holds Out DETROIT - Leon Hart yesterday he may retire from fessional football unless he reach agreement on a 1956 tract with the Detroit Lions. The former all-America said pro- can con- end and Company DIAL 2-3136 For Program Information -1 * froze. Notre Dame, who has played six seasons in the National Foot- ball League, officially became a holdout yesterday as Lion veterans assembled for training at nearby Ypsilanti. The Lions' management said it" is at "substantial odds" over a new contract for the 6'5", 250- pounder. * * * New Ring Ratings NEW YORK - Three young fighters, who have caught the eyes of the fans with impressive vic- tories in the past few months, were rewarded yesterday with a ranking c among the top boxers in the latest monthly ring ratings. Rory Calhoun of White Plains, N. Y., was placed 10th among the middleweights on the strength of his 22-0 record, including 12 knockouts. New York feather- weights Ike Chestnut and Miguel Berrios were ranked ninth and 10th, respectively, among the 126- pounders following their triumphs In national television scraps. Coming Friday DEAN MARTIN & JERRY LEWIS in "PARDNERS" ection i Modern eoli DIAL NO 2-2513 Formerly $65 and $75 NOW $3195 Formerly $59.50 and $60 NOW Formerly $40-$42.50-$47.50 NOW Formerly $32.75-$35-$39.50 NOW I Eves. Only Today and Friday 1 k I 4675 Washtenaw Ave. ,,___Ends Tonight "MAN IN THE GREY FLANNEL SUIT" ,, and "SPYCHASERS" " e ,u ,, ; "A stunning and brilliant dancer . .. She can jump over Brooklyn Bridge, and when she throws herself down and rolls across the floor at forty miles an hour, it makes your hair curl with excitement." -John Martin, N. Y. Times I I . . See the NEW LOOK at Ann Arbor's AMERICAN LEGION CLUB ALL SALES FINAI "+ vi: / . I I