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October 07, 1960 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-10-07

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

I-M ACTION:
Psi OmegaPosts Shutout

si
'goo

I*

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1890.

NUMBERI.

BUR RUGBY TEAM. Ibefore, and there will be a game
at Buffalo this year that will be
marked by sandy playing, and a
THE NEVCLEUS of IT PRACTIC-. much closer score than Cornell
ING DAILY ON THE CAMPUS . b
will look for. To begin with
- t"Systematic Work" is to be the'
Thoe like look this past week. foundation of tle Rugby eleven
home ike lok ths pastweek y ear. At 4 P. Id., every day,
Every afternoon has seen some ofter At 4hY.wM.t eterplay,
blr.AI k l (evrryroan who wants to play on

our canvas ac eo ug gy piayeras
tossing the ball back and forth, or
trying to kick goals. It has been
cold and raw, but the spectators
have had many a laugh as the
boys would form an invincible V
and split the wind with it, but if
they have had nothing but the
wind to buck against, they have
at least been learning to stand
shoulder to shoulder. And they
are doing good work, these few
who are back getting in condition
by tossing the ball, tackling,
breaking the line, trying the V
or the gridiron, and learning the
twist that gave Ames of Prince-
ton his celebrated nick-name of
"Snake Ames"~
The boys are working nder
Malley, who has brought back a
trunk full of new triceks and has
already began to teach his men a
few of them. Abbott, Trainer,
Hatch, DePont, R athbone, Dy.
gert,McAllaster, Stone,and Chad.
bourne take to them as naturally as
any canvas-back does to water.
Of course the boys are all "soft,"
and short windd as yet, but if
they follow the liner laid down by
Captain Malley it will be soiled
meat and sand that Cornell runs
up against this year.
It does ones heart good to hear
Captain Malley talk. If he does
one half the'.hings he wants to do,
he will do double of anything
that has ever been thought of here

the teams must show up on the
Campus. At 4:15 the players on
the ground will be placed on the
linen of the two teams-for it is
Malley's intention to play two
teams every day-and the play.
ers will play in these positions the.
remainder of the day, the late
comers taking any positions that
may be left (?) when they get
there. At 5:15 the teams will go'
to a bath-room to be placed prob-
ably in the basement of the Medi-
cal building.tHere a douse and a
rub and then to Prettymnan's,
where they will rest and discuss
the plays of the afternoon while a
supper is being prepared for them
at a training table .thatPrettyman
is to run for them. This will be
run in the same way that the
Eastern training tables are.
"Those who work shall play."
This comes pretty near being an
Irish Bull, but Malley says that
"It goes," and adds " I want at
least fourteen new men this year,
and I want the boys to come out
,and try for these positions. And
when it comes to selecting the
men who will go East this year,
it is going to be a simple question
of the twenty-two men who can
and have been playing the best
Rugby day by day. Twenty-two
then will go East. The Harvard,
Yale and Princeton players are ll
hard at work now, every man of
them, and it is time that our boys
were willing to do the *am* if

Wright,}Ray & Co.
r r- gn Biers Irnpo-ters of Gjm 3
and Art Ocous, v eveters arid Op-
tic:ans Manufact.rers of the
F.nest Socety Badges made in the
couritry Samples sent upon pro-
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De troitOjera I v B3UE.,
140 WOODWARD AVE.,
Detroit, - M!ch Ian.
they ever hope to down the Eastern,
team. And the fact is they've
got to work iff they play this
year."
Malley is very, very right, and
every man who plays Rugby ought
to come out, put his foot in the
ball, and try for a position on the
team. If you fail for the Varsity
eleven there will still be the second
eleven, all of whom will take the
Eastern trip. Twenty-two men
will go.East.
In the way of material not al-
ready noticed Van Deventer, the
Shermans, Haynes, Vanlnwagen,
Glidder, Sunderland, Duffy, and
Prettyman are expected to be here
this year. For new material,
Jewett, who played a rattling
game as half-back for the High
School eleven last year, ente '94
lit. Ninety-four also gets Chad-
bourne, who played center on the
Phillip's Exeter Academy eleven
last year, the eleven that mtde
such a good showing against such
college teams as Dartmouth, Am-
herst, and the Tech. Over in the
law school they have Stone, a
graduate of Swarthmore, '89, who
played full-back a portion of the
time while there. The most that'
can be said of these new men now is
that they bid fair with practice to
be able to get onto one of the two
teams.

and JIM BERGER
Great passing and shutoutst
again prevailed as IM football
action closed its second week of
play yesterday at Ferry and Wines
Fields, and in the I-M Fraternity
Track Meet, Phi Gamma Delta
successfully defended its title.-
In the biggest rout of the day
Nel Sherburne sparked Psi Omega
to a 26-0 victory over Gamma Al-
pha in professional fraternity ac-
tion. The speedy quarterback took
part in all four of his team's
touchdowns as he scored twice
and passed for the other two ''D's.
One of his scoring runs came on
the opening kickoff, the other on
a 50-yard broken field run.
Terry MacDonald, Sherburne's
favorite target and Bob Grunde-
man were on the receiving end of
the TD passes, while defensive
standout Harv Johnson added two
points to his team's cause when
he nailed GA quarterback John
Winnieman in the end zone for
a safety.
Mantle's Bat
Leads Yanks
To Victory
(Continued from Page 1)

In another professional frater-
nity tussle, Phi Delta Epsilon held
defending champion Nu Sigma Nu
scoreless through the first half,
but finally succumbed to the Nu
Sigs, 8-0, on the strength of a
50 yard run-pass play from quar-
terback Roger Netzer to Dave.,
Dingman on the first play from
scrimmage in the second half.
In a game marked by defensive
standouts, the Law Club edged
Tau Epsilon Rho, 2-0.
After a TER punt following the
first set of plays from scrimmage
the Lawyers drove to the Tau Ep-
silon five, but the defense tight-
ened up and the Law Club was
forced to give the ball up on
downs.
However, TER quarterback Ab-
ba Friedman, while trying to get
his team out of its own territory,
was nailed in the end zone by Jay
Hodgson, with an assist from Joe
Kuski.
In the top Social Fraternity
"B" game of the day, Zeta Beta
Tau shutout Delta Tau Delta, 16-
0. Larry May and Ken Baim scor-
ed the ZBT touchdowns, both on
intercepted passes.
In other professional fraternity
games, Phi Alpha Kappa beat Phi
Chi, 10-0; Phi Delta Phi whipped
Alpha Omega, 20-6; Alpha Chi
Sigma over Delta Theta Phi, 1-0,
in overtime; Alphia Kappa Kappa
forfeited to Alpha Kappa Psi and

TEAM STANDINGS
Phi Gamma Delta
Phi Delta Theta
Sigma Chi
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Phi Sigma Delta
Alpha Tau Omego
Delta Upsilon
Sigma Alpha Mu
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Lambda Chi Alpha
Zeta Psi
Tau Epsilon Phi
Alpha Kappa. Lambda
Chi Psi
Trigon
Beta Theta P1
Phi Epsilon Pi

Phi Delta Chi forfeited to Phi
Rho Sigma.
In social fraternity 'B' games,
Alpha Tau Omega trounced The-
ta Delta Chi, 20-0; Theta Xi up-
ended Zeta Psi, 20-0; Phi Upsilon
forfeited to Kappa, Sigma and
Phi Kappa Tau forfeited to Kappa
Sigma.
In independent action the For-
esters whipped 526 Club, 18-8 and
Muskrats beat the Drifters, 8-6.
IM TRACK RESULTS
High Hurdles - Jim Kay, Phi
,Gamma Delta; Mile-Jim Wler,
Sigma Chi; 100-Yard Dash-Rod
Waddell, Delta Upsilon; 440-Yard
Dash-Larry Van Tuyl, Phi Gamma
Delta; 880-Yard run-Bill Niemann,
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Low Hurdles
-Jim Kay, Phi Gamma Delta;
High Jump-Mike Harris and Don
Simmonds, Phi Delta Theta (tie);
Pole Vault-Ron JaCo, Sigma Chi;
Broad Jump-Mike Dean, Sigma Al-
pha Mu; Shot Put-John Mans, Phi
Delta Theta.

30
2s
17j
12
10
9
6
4
3
3
2 a
2.
2
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by Turley and picked up two
more in the fifth on Mantle's two-
run homer.
Then came the big sixth, Man-
tle's three-run homer in the sev-
enth and the final run in the
ninth wild pitched home by Tom
Cheney, the sixth Pirate pitcher.
Every Yankee starter had at
least one hit, and even the two,
infield replacements-Cletis Boy-
er and Joe DeMaestri-each had
a hit. Bobby Shantz, who finish-
ed up for Turley in the ninth,
never got a chance at the plate.
Kubek and Richardson each had
threehits and the rest were well
divided.
Fords vs. Mizell
Stengel announced in the club-
house that Whitey Ford (12-9),
his veteran left-hander would
start against the Pirates in the
third game tomorrow at Yankee
Stadium. There will be no game
today, an open date. Vinegar Bend
Bill Mizell (14-8), also a south-
paw, will pitch for Pittsburgh.
The Pirate scoring was con-
fined to the fourth when the sin-
gles by Cimoli and Burgess and
Hoak's double produced one'run
-and the ninth when they count-
ed twice.
Bucs Score in Ninth
In the ninth pinch hitter Joe
Christopher was hit by a pitch.
With one out Rocky Nelson sin-
gled and Cimoli followed with an-
other single, scoring Christopher.
After Burgess' 'single, a wild
throw by Richardson let Nelson
score from third.
That brought in Bobby Shant
who ended the game by starting
a double play on Hoak's smash
back to the box.
Beater. Bucs

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seen the Michigan Daily grow from a small edition featuring news of the general biology department, the rugby team and
other campus events to an eight-page newspaper covering the diverse activities of the zoology and botany departments, foot-
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Read and Use The Michigan Daily Classifieds!

NEW YORK (A)
Kubek as-if
McDougald 3b
DeMaestrl ss
Marts rf
Mantle ef
Berra If
Boyer 3b
Skowron lb
Howard c
Richardson 2b
Turley p
Shantz p
Totals

AB
6
3
2
5
4
4
2
6
5
4
4
0

RH Rbi PO
3 3 1 2
1 1 1 b
2 1 0 3
1 1 2 1
0 1 0 0
1 2 1 11
0 0 0 0

A
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
9
2
1

I

r

I

SOCIALHOUR
Friday, October 7, 1960
5-7 P. M.
V.F.W. CLUB
314 East Liberty
Presented by the Graduate Student Council

PITTSBURGH (N)
Virdon cf
Groat ss
Gipbon p
Cheney p
c-Christopher
Clemente rf
Nelson lb
Cimoli If
Burgess c
Hoak 3b
Mazeroski 2b
Friend p
a-Baker
Green p
Labine p
witt p
b-Schofield s

45 16 19 15 27 12
AB R H Rbi PO A
5 0.0 0 2 0
4 0 1 0 1 0
0.0 0 0 1 0
0 0 0 0 0 1
0 1 0 0 0 0
5 0 2 0 1 0
5 1 2 0 4 1
4 012010
4 0 2 1 0 0
5 0 1 0 2 2
1 0 0 0 1 1
1 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0 0 0
39 3 13 2 27 9

F

Totals

11

I'

"1

a-Popped out for Friend in 4th.
b-Singled for Witt in 6th.
c-Hit by pitch for Cheney in 9th.
New York (A) 002 127 301-16
Pittsburgh (N) 000 100 002- 3
E - Groat, Richardson. DP --
Shantz, Richardson and Skowron.
LOB-New York (A) ,, Pittsburgh
(N) 13. 2B--Mazeroski, MeDougald,
Hoak 2, Richardson, Boyer. -3B --,
Howard. HR-Mantle 2. S-Turley.
3P H R ER BB SO
Friend (L) 4 6 3 2 2 6
x-Green 1 3 4 4 1 0
Labine 3 5 0 1 1
Witt 2 0 0 0 0
Gibbon 2 4 3 3 0 2
Cheney 1 1 1 1 1 2
Turley (W) 8 4 13 3 2 3 0
Shantz % 0 0 0 0 0
xi-Faced 2 batters in sixth.
T--3.14. A-37,308.

4 ..V

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