1951 TUESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1951 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE of a, and all 10 market is this ampus conver- of the it's no nor the on ng on oper- and oe and doctors artilage er say l says Keith Frogs peears knee miliar great injury of last bowler, had a ing. Yanks Beat Lemon 2To1;Fatten Lead New York—(U.P.)-Manager Casey Stengel of the pennant-expectant Yankees accused the White Sox of ganging up on his club today in an effort to knock them out of the race. Stengel wasn't particularly mad about it and said it was Chicago manager Paul Richards' "own business" if he held his top pitcher, Saul Rogovin, out of the Red Sox series so he would be able to pitch against the Yankees tonight. Rogovin, a 12-game winner, who has not pitched since Sept. 9, when he beat the Tigers, will go in tonight's game with the Yankees with eight days of rest. Stengel also pointed out that Billy Pierce, Chicago's other big winner who has 13 victories, wasn't used in Boston. The Yankees were worrying in advance over the White Sox, even though they disported themselves like real flag winners in their two triumphs over the Indians. After yesterday's 2 to 1 triumph in which Phil Rizzo squeeze-bunted home the winning run in the ninth inning for Ed Lopat's 20th victory, the Yankees were a full game in front of Cleveland and $2_{1/2}$ ahead of the Red Sox. Boston drubbed the White Sox, 12 to 5, as Richards strung along with second-line pitching and saved Rogovin and Pierce. The weak-hitting Indians now have provided Lemon with only one run in his past 21 innings of mound locop. Lopat reached the 20-victory level for the first time in his professional career. Boston scored four runs in the first inning and ran up a 12-0 lead for Ray Scarborough before he eased up and permitted five runs in the ninth, Clyde (Clutch) Vollmer drove in five runs, three on a homer, while Ted Williams got four hits, one his 30th homer. Rizutto, who drove in both runs in the tight victory over hard-luck Bob Lemon, bunted the ball so perfectly with the bases loaded and Joe DiMaggio almost across the plate when it landed, that Lemont didn't even bother to field it. The Cubs came from behind to top the Dodgers, 5 to 3, and cut their National League lead to four games over the idle Giants. A pair of two-run homers by Hank Sauer and ex-Dodger Gene Hermanski gave the Cubs their triumph. Tom Brown's homer gave the Phillies a 2-1 victory over the Cardinals and Robin Roberts his 20 win in the only night game. It was the second straight 20-victory season for the strong right-hander and gave the Phillies a 13-9 edge over St. Louis in their season's series. Major League Standings American League W. L. Pct. G.B. New York 89 53 .627 Cleveland 90 56 .616 1 Boston 86 55 .610 2 Chicago 76 68 .528 14 Detroit 67 77 .465 23 Philadelphia 64 81 .441 26 Washington 56 85 .397 32 St. Louis 44 97 .312 44 National League W. L. Pct. G.B. Brooklyn 90 51 638 New York 88 76 607 Fla. Louis 76 67 49 Boston 78 70 510 Philadelphia 68 76 472 233 Cincinnati 67 63 428 30 Chicago 59 85 410 322 Pittsburgh 59 85 410 33 Alumni in the Kansas City area will have an opportunity to meet Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy this evening at a dinner given by the Kansas City alumni chapter at Blue Hills club. Kansas City Alumni To Meet Chancellor About 300 persons are expected to attend. Arthur C. Lonborg, K.U. athletic director, and Cliff Kimsey, backfield coach will attend the dinner and discuss K.U.'s chances in the Big Seven football race this year. Members of the football team will also be guests. Gridder Injured Playing Baseball Curtis DeBey, a husky frost prospect from Downs, broke his leg in a baseball game in his hometown late in August. DeBEY DeBey, a center candidate for this year's grid aggregation, was an 11-letterman in football, basketball and track in high school. Latest reports indicate he'll be back in uniform by mid-season. Senator Requests A Baseball Commission New York—(U.P.)—Sen. Estes Kefauver, Director of the Senate Crime Investigating Committee, said in an article published today that he believed Congress should "establish a baseball commission" to govern "The basic structure of the sport and the powers of the high commissioner." Writing in a Baseball magazine, Kefauver said such action "would eliminate any danger that ownership might tend to elect its commissioners with the understanding that he would act principally as a figure-head for them." "The institution of baseball requires discipline of ownership as well as playing personnel," Kefauver said as major league owners prepared to meet at Chicago Thursday to choose a successor to A. B. (Happy) Chandler as baseball commissioner. Official Admits To Gifts Washington—(U.P.)—Frank Prince, a former official of the reconstruction corporation, admitted Monday that he received a camera, a bottle of perfume and food as gifts from the president of the American Lithofold corporation. Prince, who resigned last May at the request of R.F.C. Chairman W. Stuart Symington, told Senate investigators he received some of the gifts from R. J. Blauner, Lithofold president, while the firm's requests for R.F.C. loans were pending. Sticky Fingers A Must For '51 Backfield Stars "Pass Happy" backs on the '51 Jayhawker grid squad will be "catch happy" as well, according to local Monday morning quarterbacks. Coach Sikes has had his backs spending much of their time catching passes. And well he might. Only veteran Bill Schaake is back this year in the end department. The brawny Lawrence co-captain has gathered over 500 yards in receptions through the past two seasons. He figures to be high among the leaders again this term. Newcomers like Jerry Taylor, tall sophomore from Carrollton, Mo., and Paul Leoni, a stubby Chicago fresh star must improve fast if the Jawhawks are to make much aerial vardage. This despite the fine throwing arm of Jerry Bogue, who has just about regained his old starting job at quarterback. Bogue will be firing regularly by his running mate Charley Hoag. And vice-versa. The Mount Oreadans frankly do not expect to replace Wade Stinson, their slashing little right halfback who raced to an all-time high of 1,129 yards last season. The fullbacks are well regarded but they will be sorely pressed to equal John Amberg's total of 441 net yards rushing. Even more serious is the loss of Mike McCormack, the huge right tackle who rammed holes in every line Kansas faced last year. McCormack was good enough to co-captain the West to victory over the East in last year's Shrine game and earn a starting berth with the College All-Stars against the Cleveland Browns in the annual Chicago extravaganza. Just a few lengths less effective were tackles Bob Talkington and S. p. Garnett and Guard Dolph Simons, all of whom walked the graduation plank last June. This gang, along with Left Halfback Charlie Hoag were the spearheads of a rushing blitz of 3.116 yards, good enough to pace the Big Seven and finish fourth on the NCAA tables. The night meeting with Texas Christian will be the first between the clubs in Fort Worth since 1942. It will be K. U.'s ninth attempt to score a victory against the Frogs, who now are working on a three-game win streak in the series. Kansas' high water mark to date came in the scoreless ties of 1946 and 1947. New high-speed photographic equipment catches the image of objects moving far faster than sound. RATES FOR HERTZ DRIVE - UR - SELF SERVICE No minimum charge—No service charge—All rates include gas, oil, and insurance. SHORT TRIP RATE 75c per hour plus 7c per mile DAILY RATE $6.00 per day plus 7c per mile WEEKLY RATE $25.00 per 7-day week plus 7c per mile BRING IN RECEIPTS for gasoline and oil purchased enroute and we will reimburse you. 634 Mass. MOTORS Phone 1000 Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. J. Paul Sheedy\* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil and Made Big Saving on 2-in-1 Sale SHEEPY-er-Sheedy, was in ba-a-adshape—everybody lamb-basted him about his messy hair! "You'll get no sheepskin," the Dean said. "Somebody's pulled the wool over your eyes. Better comb it ba-a-ack with Wildroot Cream-Oil!" Then Paul herd about a special Wildroot 2-in-1 bargain: 2 regular 29¢ bottles, a 58¢ value, for only 39¢—the sheepest price ever! (Non-alcoholic Wildroot contains Lanolin. Relieves dryness. Removes loose dandruff. Helps you pass the finger-nail test.) Now Sheedy has more girls than the Sheep of Araby! Get this ba-a-argain at any drug or toilet goods counter today! 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