THE ' ICUrr N DAILY THURSDAY, JUKE 2a, 1956 TflE~ MICUlGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JUNE RS, 1S56 !oston, Cleveland Win in High Scoring Games Tribe Cops Eighth in Row; Tigers Lose Tenth in Row Five All-Star Redlegs WOLVERINES ELIMINATED: NCAA Tennis, Golf Tourneys Continue By The Associated Press C H I C A G O-The Boston Red Sox blew a seven-run lead but came up with a three-run eighth- inning rally to beat the Chicago White Sox, 11-9, yesterday and snap Chicago's nine-game winning streak. Boston battered seven Chicago pitchers for 15 hits with Ted Wil- liams slamming out four singles through the "William's Shift" in five official at bats. The game-winning rally in the eighth came after Dixie Howell, fourth Chicago pitcher, had re- tired the first two men. Don Bud- din doubled and pinch batter Dick Gernert's single broke a 8-8 tie. Singles by Billy Goodman, Billy Klaus and Williams sent two more runs across. * * * Indians 12, Orioles 11 CLEVELAND - The Cleveland Indians came from behind twice, once overcoming an eight-run def- icit, to beat the Baltimore Orioles, 12-11 in a 11-inning contest that Cubs Make Big Splash BROOKLYN, N. Y. ()-Here's a portion of the play-by-play de- scription of the Chicago Cubs- Brooklyn Dodgers baseball game yesterday after play was suspend- ed in the Brooklyr half of the third inning because of a heavy thunderstorm: "Play was resumed after a de- lay of 1 hour and 17 minutes. "Furillo flied to Moryn who splashed through water to make the catch. "Walker doubled to center, Miksis falling down in the mud as he tried to field the ball off the center field wall. Walker might have had his second triple in as many days but fell rounding first base. "Evidently Miksis fell into an open drain and the game was held up while the groud crew replaced the cover. It was then discovered that all the outfield drains were open. The game was further de- layed while the covers were re- placed. "Miksis was hurt and Whisenant went to center field." The Dodgers won the swim-fest, 6-2. stretched the Tribe's winning streak to eight straight games. Chicago Carrasquel's fifth hit of the game, a single with one out, scored Al Rosen from second with the winning run. Rosen had singled, and stole second as win- ning pitcher Don Mossi struck out. * * * Senators 3, Tigers 1 DETROIT-The Detroit Tigers lost their 10th game without a victory, bowing 3-1, to Bob Wiesler and the Washington Nationals. Wiesler allowed the Tigers only five hits. It was the 11th start without a victory forI the Tigers although they battled the Senators to a 2-2 deadlock Tuesday night. * * * Phils 4, Brasves 3 PHILADELPHIA-Stan Lopata homered over the roof of the left field stands in the 11th inning to give the Philadelphia Phillies a 4-3 victory over league-leading Milwaukee. The first baseman's' blast came after the Phillies had rallied to tie the game at 3-3 in the ninth in- ning on a double by Jim Green- grass scored Willie Jones from first. It was the Phillies' second straight victory over the Braves. The Phils ended an 11-game Mil- waukee winning streak Tuesday night. * * * Redlegs 10, Pirates 2 PITTSBURGH -- Righthander Brooks Lawrence; won his 10th straight game without a lossas the Cincinnati Redlegs scored nine runs in a wild eighth inning to defeat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 10-2. Cards 6, Giants 0 NEW YORK-Ken Boyer hit two home runs, taking over the Na- tional League lead with a total of 19, as the St: Louis Cardinals shut out the New York Giants, 6-0, on the five-hit pitching of Tom Poholsky. Dodgers 6, Cubs 2 BROOKLYN-Brooklyn hopped on Warren Hacker for four runs in the fourth inning with the help of two Chicago errors to beat the Cubs, 6-2, in a rain-spattered gare that found outfielders skid- ding on the wet turf and splashing through puddles. LATE SCORE Yanks 5, A's 2 ROY McMILLAN ED BAILEY ... at shortstop .. . catching JOHNNY TEMPLE ... at second base GUS BELL .. in center field Majdfr League Stand ings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct New York........ 43 24 .642 Chicago,.... 37 23 .617 Cleveland............ ; Boston..........32 ,31 .508 Baltimore-........31 35 .470 Detroit . 27 36 .429 .Washington ..., 28 42 .400 Kansas City . 25 41 .379 TODAY'S SCHEDULDE Detroit at Kansas City (Only game scheduled) NATIONAL LEAGUE Gil 9 tt 14 16'p.. Cincinnati, Monopolizes VotingTally NEW YORK (IP)-Unless there is a last-minute switch in the votes still to be counted, the Na- tional League lineup for the July 10 All-Star game at Washington will not include a single 1955 starter. With five Cincinnati Redlegs in the lead and three others in sec- ond place, men like Red Schoen- dienst, Duke Snider, Ernie Banks, Roy Campanella and Eddie Math- ews may be on the outside looking in. Kell Replaces Finigan The American League vote, on the other hand, will show the 1955 lineup intact, with one exception. George Kell of Baltimore is lead- ing at third base instead of Jim Finigan of Kansas City. The eight starters are selected by fan vote. Pitchers and other members of the 25-man squads are picked by the opposing man- agers, Brooklyn's Walter Alston of the National and New York's Casey Stengel of the American. Five Leaders The current standings show Cincinnati with five leaders: sec- ond baseman Johnny Temple, Shortstop Roy McMillan, 1 e f t fielder Frank Robinson, center fielder Gus Bell and catcher Ed Bailey. First baseman Dale Long of Pittsburgh, third baseman Ken Boyer of St. Louis and right field- er Stan Musial of the Cards com- plete the list of this year's present front-runners. The 1955 starters were Ted Kluszewski, Schoendienst, Banks and Mathews in the infield with Del Ennis, Snider and Don Muel- ler in the outfield and Del Cran- dall catching because Campanella was injured . By DICK ELSMAN Special To The Daily KALAMAZOO - UCLA advanc- ed four singles players and a doubles team into today's quarter- finals of the NCAA Tennis Tourn- ament to take a two-point lead in team scoring in the week long tourney. Michigan's Dick Potter, the last representative of the Big Ten in the elimination matches, was oust- ed by one of the rampaging Bruins in yesterday's eighth-finals. John Lesch defeated him, 6-1, 6-2. Two other California schools, Southern Cal and Stanford, pro- vided UCLA with its greatest com- petition for the team champion- ship. USC trailed the Bruins' 10 point total by two and Stanford was third with five points. Two upsets marked yesterday's round on the red-clay courts of Kalamazoo College's Stadium. De- fending singles champion Jose Aquero of Tulane, the number one seeded player, was eliminated by Joaquin Reyes of Southern Cal, 2-6, 6-1, 6-2. UCLA's John Cranston downed fourth-seeded Pancho Contreras of USC, 6-1, 6-4. Two Michigan players lost their consolation mathces yesterday to highly-rated opponents. J o h n Powless of Murray State (Ky.) drubbed Dale Jensen, 6-2, 6-0. John Harris lost to Houston Uni- versity's Ronnie Sawyer, 7-5, 6-1. One Wolverine, Mark Jaffe, re- FRANK ROBINSON . . . in left field i M' Awards 53 Letters DICK POTTER ... last net hope gone W L Pet GB Milwaukee ........35 Cincinnati ....... 36 Brooklyn ........ 35 St. Louis ,........ 34 Pittsburgh ........31 Philadelphia ..... 27 Chicago.........24 New York..... ..24 Michigan's Fred Micklow was eliminated yesterday in a close match with Don Sechrest of Okla- homa A&M, 2 and 1. Sechrest must play Campbell today. The defending cham missed par only once, on the first hole. But Campbell caught George with a birdie on the seventh, went out front with a bird on the ninth, two up with a par on No. 12 and birdi- ed the 490-yard 14th for an un- surmountable lead. Medalist Rex Baxter of Houston was two over the card in defeat- ing Jake Howard of Georgia, 3 and 1. John Garrett of Rice, 1955 loser to Campbell, smothered Fred Wilt of Ohio University, 7 and 6. Of 11 players who squeezed into match play in a sudden death playoff this morning after tying at 154, six won over favored foes to advance to the second round. Oklahoma A. & M. has four players in the running, Houston has three. Louisiana State, Pur- due, Ohio State, Southern Metho- dist, North Texas State, North Carolina, Florida State and Notre Dame have two each, while single survivors represent Rice, Oregon, UCLA, Michigan State, southern Cal, Iowa, Texas Tech, Yale and Northwestern. The second and third rounds of match play ,will occur today. The quarter-finals and semi-finals will be played Friday with the 36-hole final round for the championship conducted Saturday. mains in contention in consola- tion play, Jaffe drew a bye yester- day and must play Gary Linden of Washington this afternoon. The elimination matches in singles and doubles pontinue until Saturday when the' finals will be played to determine the national collegiate champions, * * * Campbell Shines COLUMBUS, OHIO (-) - Joe Campbell, Purdue's NCAA golf champion, served notice yesterday he isn't going to relinquish his laurels without a struggle. The Boilermaker ace was two under par for the 16 holes he needed to oust Ernie George of San Jose State, 3 and 2, in the opening round of match play in the 59th annual championship over Ohio State's par 72 course. Campbell led 32 stalwarts from 19 universities into the second round of play. 24 26 27 31 30 36 35 37 .593 .581 .523 .52:3 .508 .429 .407 .353 4 5 10 11 12 I Four pr Spring sports produced 53 lett- erwinners from Michigan's track, baseball, tennis and gilf teams. cluded titleholders Dave Owens, Eeles Landstrom and Brendan 0'- Reiley and Mark Booth. Other tracksters receiving lett- ers were Captain Ron Walling- ford, Bob Appleman. Ken Bottoms, Bob Brown, Helmer Dollwet, Dick Flodin, George Cluppe, Peter Gray, Ralph Gray, Tom Hendricks, Jr., Geert Keilstrup, Ron Kramer, Don Matheson, Stan Menees, Jim Pace, Bob Rudesill, Laird Sloan and Robin Varian. Seventeen lettermen emerged from Coach Ray Fisher's baseball squad which finished fourth in the Big Ten. They were Captain Moby Bene- dict, Steve Boros, Jim Clark, Mark Ferrelli, Dean Finkbeiner, Bruce Fox, Glen Girardin, Dick Peter- john, Don Poloskey, Don Rambie- sa, Frank Ronan, Bob Sealby, Al Sigman, Gene Snider, Bill Thurs- ton, Ken Tippery and Howie Tom- melein. inrg'Sports Seven members of Coach Bill Murphy's Big Ten tennis champs received their letter. They were Captain Barry MacKay who won the Conference singles title, Lar- ry Brown, Dick Cohen, John Har- ris, Mark Jeffe, Dale Jensen and Dick Potter.. Members of Coach Bert Katzen- meyer's second place golf team to , win their awards were Captain Bob McMasters, Stan Kwasiborski, Henry Loeb, Bob MacMichael, Fred Micklow and John Schubeck. Hairstyling for the_ Whole Family!! 0 11 STYLISTS * AIR-CONDITIONED * LATEST STYLES The Bascola Barbers Near the Michigan Theater .l ::;: ::, ,: ,.:.tg,.:".."-": - fm. r"a service to suit ;our burse and convenience" ONE-STOP FAST SERVICE;a FINISHED SHIRTS 48-hour service * * 10%off I9' I; TODAY'S SCHEDULDE Brooklyn at New York (N) Cincinnatiat Pittsburgh (N) (Only games scheduled) DRY CLEANING . . . 48-hour service LAUNDRY . . . self-service or drop-off We wash your duds in separate tubs" SPORTS SHORTS: MacKay Loses Wimbledon Net Match PACKARD 715 Packard (near S Ample Parking, Self Service tate St.) LAUNDRY Phone NO 2-4241 Open Evenings J _ _ ,.,.. By the Associated Press WIMBLEDON, England-Seven American men and Australia's one-two punch of Lew Hoad and Ken Rosewall survived the second round of singles play on Wimble- don's courts yesterday, but eight other Americans, including Michi- gan's Barry MacKay and the vet- eran Budge Patty, were eliminat- ed. Ham Richardson of Westfield, N. J., and Vic Seixas of Philadel- Officials are needed for this summer's I-M softball league. Those interested should call NO 3-4181. --Ed Olds phia won decisively, with Richard- son actually winning two matches during the day. MacKay, B i g T e n singles champion, was ousted by Den- mark's Torben Ulrich, 7-5, 6-4, 6-2. Another Davis Cup hopeful Sammy Giammalva of Texas was also eliminated, 6-1, 9-7, 6-4 by Gordon Forbes of South Africa. Patty, the former Los Angeles player who now lives in Paris, bowed to 20-year-old Bobby Wil- son of Britain 12-10, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. Althea Gibson of New York, the pre - Wimbledon sensation, and Shirley Fry of St. Petersburg, Fla. advanced in women's play along with Louis Snow of Oakland, Calif., Darlene Hard of Monte- bello, Calif., and Barbara Scho- field Davidson of Milwaukee. * * Women Golfers Win SUNNINGDALE, England-Pol- ly Riley, a little Texan with the old Alamo spirit, sank two great putts on the 18th green yesterday to reach the quarter-finals of the British Women's Amateur Golf Championship. Polly joins three other Ameri- cans-Margaret Wiffi Smith of St. Clair, Mich., Mary Ann Downey of Baltimore and Mary Patton Jans- sen of Charlottesville, Va., in to- day's quarterfinals. Missing afteA two rugged rounds over the 6,022-yard Sunningdale course were the defending cham- pion, Mrs. Jessie Valentine of Scotland; the American cham- pion, Pat Lesser of Seattle; the 1954 American champion; Barbara Romack of Sacramento, Calif.; and Mrs. Bunty Stephens Smith, twice winner of the British cham- pionship. Ring Magazine Ratings NEW YORK - Light heavy- weight champion Archie Moore, who has claimed the world heavy- weight title vacated by Rocky Marciano, was listed as the No. 1 contender yesterday in the latest monthly rankings of Ring Maga- zine. Moore signed Tuesday to meet James J. Parker of Barrie, Ont., at Toronto July 25 in a bout billed for the "heavyweight champion- ship of the world." Parker recently defeated John- ny Arthur, British Empire heavy- weight champion, but the Cana- dian =is unlisted in the first 10 in either the heavyweight or light heavyweight rankings i s s u e d Wednesday. Moore is light heavy- weight champion. 4:, E.4 I TYPEWRITING SHORTHAND ACCOUNTING OFFICE MACHINES A SINGLE SUBJECT or A COMPLETE COURSE Hamilton Business College State at William St. NO 8-7831 48th Year 11 0 For Bargains in N EW and USED SPECIAL SAVINGS ON" JOYCE SHOES $685 I I r? 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