1 Page 5 Brave Pitcher Fans 8 For Strikeout Mark New York—(U.P.)-Chunky Max Surkont put his name into the record books today by striking out eight straight batters. The right hander for the Braves' turned in his sixth straight victory, toning Cincinnati 10-3. In the second inning he fanned pitcher Herman Wehmeier. In the next frame he whiffed Rocky Bridges, Bobby Adams, and Gus Bell and in the fourth his victims were Willard Marshall, Bob Borkowski and Grady Hatton. He broke the record in the fifth when Andy Seminick struck out, but Roy McMillan ended the spell when he lined out. The mark surpassed the previous record of seven set by Hooks Wiltse of the Giants in 1906. The first place Braves swept both ends of a double bill from the Reds, winning the opener 5-1 as Don Lidle pitched three-hit ball for his second win. Del Crandall's two-run put him ahead to stay in the end. In Surkont's victory, Ed Mathews drove in five runs with a pair of homers. In the American League, the Red Sox and Yankees also made history by playing the longest nine-inning game in major league annals, going three hours and 52 minutes before Boston finally won 14-10 with a 20-hit barrage. Mickey Dernott, the winning pitcher, collected four hits while Jimmy Piersall had an inside-the-park-homer, a double and single for Boston. The Dodgers made it three in a row over the Phillies, coming from behind to win 11-9, while the Cardinals drubbed the Cubs 14-3 with 18 hits, and the Giants again topped Pittsburgh 6-3 although Ralph Kiner hit his 300th big league homer. In other American League games the White Sox handed the Brows their eighth straight defeat 7-5, and Washington beat Philadelphia 6-1. Cleveland and Detroit were idle. The Giants made 12 hits in their easy triumph at Pittsburgh. Davey Williams collected three as relief pitcher Dutch Hiller gained the victory. Kiner became the 12th player in big league history to hit 300 or more homers. Homers by Carl Furillo, Jackie Robinson, and Roy Campanella sparked the Dodgers as they came from behind at Philadelphia. Rookie Bob Milliken picked up his first big league win in a relief role. Stan Musial had one of those days in Chicago when he hit two homers and drove in six runs, but Red Schoendienst was almost as potent, connecting for a double and three singles to give Joe Presko his third win. Washington scored all of its runs in the first inning on five walks and singles by Jackie Jensen and Ed Fitzgerald, then coasted to victory behind the six-hit pitching of Julio Moreno. The Browns and White Sox battled three hours and 17 minutes in another marathon, but Chicago clinched the victory with two runs in the eighth on doubles by Nellie Fox and Al Carrasque, and an infield single by Jim Rivera to give relief specialist Luis Aloma his second victory. ATO's Win Hill IM 'B' Title; Phi Psi's Take Frat 'A' Flag Alpha Tau Omega won the Hill intramural "B" softball title yesterday by squeezing past Independent champion AFROTC 8-5, and Phi Kappa won the Fraternity "A" title by beating ATO 6-2. The "A" Hill championship game will be played at 4 p.m. today with Phi Psi opposing Pearson hall. ATO got off to a two-run lead in the first inning in the "B" game, scoring the tallies on five walks and an error, and added another pair in the second on a single, double, and another single. The AFROTC team bounced back in its half of the second to pull within one, 3-4 as it scored three runs on a trio of ATO errors plus a homer by Jack Metz, but the winners came back with three more runs in the sixth to ice the victory. A walk backed up by homers by Don Carpenter and Jim Schmidt accounted for the runs. In the Fraternity "A" finale, Phi Psi earned the right to meet Fearson today by defeating ATO 6-2. Duane Speckman's triple, a walk, and singles by Anderson and Bob Knightly brought in three first-inning runs to give the victors a lead they never relinquished. Phi Psi got another pair of runs in the second on a single, double, and a walk. Jim Houghton tried to put his ATO teammates back into the contest with a home run in the third and a triple in the fifth, but his efforts fell short. Both teams got seven hits. A Great Career Ahead IN SALES . This Might be the Most Important Ad You Have Ever Read! Due to our rapid expansion program, the Ortho Pharmaceutical Corporation has a number of sales openings nationally—several in the midwestern states. We are seeking young men (22-30) who are highly motivated with college pre-med or similar science background. Selling experience helpful but not required. 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GRAH Divisional Sales Manager 1155 Dierks Building Kansas City, Missouri League Standings W. L. Pet G.B. New York 23 11 67 Cleveland 18 12 660 3 Chicago 18 12 595 3 Boston 20 15 375 3 Washington 19 17 528 5 Philadelphia 16 12 421 9 St. Louis 12 12 353 11 Detroit 12 20 278 14 AMERICAN LEAGUE RESULTS MONDAY Boston 14, New York 10. Washington 7, Philadelphia 1. St. Louis 7, St. Louis 5. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE NATIONAL W. L. 11. Pet G.B. Milwaukee 20 11 645 St. Louis 19 12 613 Brooklyn 20 14 588 Philadelphia 17 19 538 New York 19 16 543 Pittsburgh 12 21 364 Chicago 10 19 345 Cincinnati 9 20 310 RESULTS MONDAY University Daily Kansan RESULTS MONDAY New York, NY Brooklyn 11, Philadelphia 9. St. Louis 14, Chicago 3. Wilmawakee 10, Cincinnati 1-3. Saints Closing On Leading Blues Rv UNITED PRESS St. Paul's hustling Saints closed in on the American Association leaders today following a 9-2 win over Kansas City which jumped them into a tie for second place, only a game behind the league-leading Blues. Rookie righthander Bob Darnell limited Kansas City to four hits while his mates came through with 11 of their own. A suddenly rejuvenated Minneapolis队, edged Louisville. 3-2. olis team edged Louisville, 3-2. Charleston put the skids under Indianapolis behind the steady hurling of Dick Fowler, who went all the way to win a 4-3 verdict. In Columbus, the cellar-dwelling Red Birds came through with an 11-5 victory over Toledo, which featured a six-run Columbus rally in the third frame when 12 players appeared at the plate. Tuesday, May 26, 1953 Leg Injury Ends Dark Star's Racing New ' York — (U.P.) — Just three short weeks after his upset triumph in the Kentucky Derby made him the toast of the nation, Dark Star came to the end of the racing trail today because of a leg injury. Harry F. Guggenheim, owner of the brown coat who astonished the experts by beating heavily-favored Native Dancer in the Derby on May 2, announced that Dark Star suffered a "bowed tendon" during last Saturday's Preakness Stakes and will be retired to stud. "I regret to say that Dark Star's racing career is at an end," Guggenheim said. Stable jockey Henry Moreno reported that, while running with great ease in the lead at the head of the stretch, Dark Star suddenly stopped. Guggenheim said that his three-year-old Star would be turned out to "unwind" at Port Washington, Long Island, this summer. Ph. 771 835 Mass. 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