Page 5 Wildness by Pitchers Big Cause of Ulcers By UNITED PRESS Oh, those bases on balls! That's a manager's lament that has caused more ulcers than wild throws, fumbles, and missed signals combined. And look at the damage they caused yesterday. At Washington, last night, young Bob Keegan, who had won three in a row for the White Sox, got into a bases-loaded jam in the bottom of the eighth and walked Roy Sievers to force home the only run in a 1-0 Senator victory. Bob Turley, the Baltimore bullet, kept the Yankees in their protracted hit slump when he yielded only two safe blows, but he lost 4-2 when he loaded the bases with walks in the fifth. Winner Ed Lopat squeezed-bunted home one run. then Turley walked another man and Joe Collins smacked a three-run triple. Bob Rush lost his chance for victory in a hurry at Chicago when the Dodgers loaded the bases in the first inning on singles by Peewee Reese and Junior Gilliam and walks to Gil Hodges and Carl Furillo which forced home a run. That was all Russ Meyer needed for he pitched a six-hit, 7-0 victory, his 11th in a row over his old mates. At St. Louis, Robin Roberts, coming back after being kayoed the previous night, hurled a seven-hit, 10-3 victory for the Phillies' sixth in a row. Although the Cardinals For Appointment were well out of it in the ninth, rookie Mel Wright compounded the felony by forcing home three batters on walks. In other games, Cincinnati defeated the Giants, 7-1 handing Sal Maglie his first defeat, while Milwaukee rookie Gene Conley pitched a six-hit 4-1 decision over Pittsburgh, as Ed Mathews hit his first home since April 25. Cleveland topped the Athletics 7-2 and the Tigers and Red Sox still were held idle by the weather in Boston. Jim Fridley had put Turley in front with a Baltimore homer. But the hurler dug his own grave with the walks. It was his second two-hit defeat of the campaign. It marked the first time this season that the slump-stuck Yankees had beaten a right hander. Meyer, who now has beaten Chicago 16 times since he left them in 1948, was aibly supported by Reese Gilliam, Duke Snider, and Hodges, who lashed out two hits apiece. Furillo batted in two runs. Bob Poterfield, who pitched nine shutouts last season to lead the majors, chalked up his first of the 1954 campaign against Keegan, holding Chicago to four hits. Roberts, who stood out in the bases-on-balls parade because he walked only one batter, yielded homers to Rip Repulski and rookie Joe Frazier, but the Phils pounded 13 hits including four by Earl Torgeson and three each by Richie Ashburn and Del Ennis to give him an easy third win. Cincinnati also collected 13 hits including homers by Gus Bell and Ted Kluszewski in the triumph over Maglie, while Bob Lemon picked up his fourth victory without much trouble against the Athletics when Cleveland piled up a 4-0 lead in the first three innings. It was Lemon's 21st career victory over Philadelphia against only six losses. Dave Philley homered for Cleveland and rookie Vic Power got his first in the majors for the A's. Fort Worth, Tex.— U.P.) -Billy Maxwell, the 1951 National Amateur champion who recently turned professional, replaced pro Jim Ferrier in the 48-player field for the $25,000 Colonial National Invitation Golf tournament today. Ferrier had to withdraw from the field because of pressure of his new duties as pro at Hollywood's Lakeside Country club. Maxwell Replaces Ferrier DU's, Phi Psi's Win in IM Play Sigma Chi, Delta Upsilon, and Phi Psi won fraternity "A" softball games yesterday. The Sigma Chis won by forfeit from Kappa Sigma, and the other two games were five inning contests. Clarence Johnson pitched the DUs to a 16-2 victory over the Sigma Nus. He gave up seven hits and one walk. The winners made 13 hits and got eight walks off loser Bob Mitchell for their. 16 runs... John Constentine hit a home run in the second for the Sigma Nus. The Phi Psi's rolled to an easy 44-2 win over the Phi Kappa Taus, as they collected 39 hits and nine walks. The PKT's got three hits and four walks off winning pitcher Bernell Hiskey. John Werling was the winning pitcher. Four home runs were hit, all by the Phi Psi's Bob Anderson and Gary Padgett connected in the second, Vern Alley in the third and Tom Pratt in the fifth inning. Today's schedule: p.m. 4:00 Field 1 AFROTC "A"-UVO 4:00 Field 2 69ers-Jolliffe 4:00 Field 3 Shackers-Sterling- Oliver. University Daily Kansan KU to Meet K-State The KU tennis squad was scheduled to meet a visiting K-State squad on the Varsity courts this afternoon. In the first encounter of the two teams at Manhattan April 20, the KU netmen downed the Wildcats 6-1. The Jayhawks before the match had a record of seven victories and two defeats. --- Thursday, May 6, 1954 IM Golf Tourney Set for Saturday Ninety-five golfers comprising 14 $\textcircled{4}$ From less than a million in use in mural garden equipment and the early 1930's, there are today Saturday on the Lawrence Country more than 4,000,000 tractors on trivy club course starting at 7:45 a.m. American farms. The tournament will be based on an 18 hole medal play. The team with the lowest total score over the 18 holes will be declared the winner. Each player will have to pay a $2 green fee. The intramural office said that all managers should check the I-M bulletin board for the schedule of the rained-out softball games. Automotive authorities agree that permanent anti-freeze should not be used from one winter to the next. This policy allows dirt and foreign articles to collect in your radiator and offers you no chance to remove them at all. Old anti-freeze also loses its rust inhibitive power. These authorities recommend that your car radiator should be drained in the spring and the old anti-freeze discarded. Fresh water and rust inhibitor should then be put back into the radiator for an efficient summer cooling system. See us today for complete radiator service. That Means Radiator Service Bridge Standard Just south of Kaw River bridge Take It From Me, Boy! You can't beat Lawrence Sanitary ICE CREAM for flavor, health, and energy Pick up a pint or quart of delicious Lawrence Sanitary Ice Cream from your grocer Today LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. 202 W. 6th Phone 696