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April 27, 1962 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-04-27

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FRIDAY, APRIL 27,1962

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

'PAM

FRIDY. ARIL 7,162 TlE 1lIC~f~A DAIY '.A I

VAU)~

Fall Grid Injuries Healed)

AT DES MOINES:
Six in Drake Meet
Aim for Triplicate

By JERRY KALISH
The man in white stood on the
side lines of the practice field
ready to be of service if he was
needed.
Jim Hunt, football trainer, was
glad that he did not have any
worries about the major injuries
incurred by the Blue footballers
last fall.
"All the boys who were hurt
are recovered or in the final
stages and should be back in
action this season," the veteran'
healer said happily.
Busy Beaver
Hunt was kept busy last season
attending to the rash of injuries
that hit key players. Frosty Eva-
shevski, sophomore quarterback,
did not even make the season
opener against UCLA when he
became the first knee case of the
team physician, Dr. A. W. Coxon.
Running the option play in early
fall drills,, Evashevski was tackled
hard and injured what the medical
profession calls an internal liga-
ment directly below the knee pro-
per.
Evashevski sat out the year, but
appears to be in top shape this
spring. He did not practice yes-
terday because of a sprained
muscle, but he is expected to press
Dave Glinka for the quarterback-
ing slot.
Kneeded
Lou Pavloff and Jack Strobel
were also patients of a knee
specialist along with Evashevski.

-Daily-Bruce Taylor
JUST BEFORE-Jack Strobel,, junior halfback, scampers for
yardage in the first half of last season's Iowa game. Soon after
this run Strobel suffered a knee injury and had to leave the
game in the second period and was out for'the rest of the season.

Pavloff, a center-guard, aggra-
vated an old injury last fall and
was out of action for the second
straight year, though as Hunt
says, "He's been out every day this
spring."
Running Around
Strobel, on the other hand, is
just running and not participating
in the contact drills. The junior
halfback was having a fine year
until he limped off the field in the
first half of the Iowa game.

i

Guard Joe O'Donnell followed
Pavloff to the sidelines after play-
ing in the first game. What at
first was thought to be a bruise
turned out to be a fractured arm.
O'Donnell had his arm in a cast
most of the winter after re-
breaking it.
O'Donnell still has his arm taped
and is not practicing with the
team during spring training, al-
though Coach Bump Elliot expects
him to be ready for action in the
fall.
Minor Ailments
Hunt is happy that "as far as
the doctors estimate there is no
great problem about last year's in-
juries."
He remains optimistic that all
he will see this spring is the
minor ailments that are connected
with football, the sprains, bruises
and the like.
"I just hope things go on like
they have," he said.

This Weekend in Sports
FRIDAY
BASEBALL-Michigan at Iowa
TRACK-Michigan at Penn Relays, Philadelphia
SATURDAY
BASEBALL-Michigan at Minnesota (two games)
TRACK-Michigan at Penn Relays
TRACK-Michigan Open at Ferry Field, 1:00
TENNIS-Michigan at Purdue
GOLF-Michigan, Ohio State, Purdue at Illinois

DES MOINES, Iowa (P) - Vic-
tories in the Drake Relays here
today and tomorrow would give
six athletes a sweep of major mid-
west track ad field honors.
All six have won their special-
ties at the Texas Relays and at
the Kansas Relays, but only four
are favored to capture Drake
titles.
Given excellent chances to com-
plete the coveted triplicate are
Ray Cunningham of Texas in the
120-yd. high hurdles, Bill Miller
of McMurray College in the Broad
jump, Don Smith of Missouri in
the shotput and Fred Hansen of
Rice in the pole vault.
Less likely to succeed are Ray
Knaub of Nebraska in the 100-yd.
dash and Bob Swafford of Texas
Tech in the 440-yd. hurdles.
Meets Hayes, Johnson
Knaub won the century in :09.6
seconds at 'Texas and raced to a
creditable :09.5 clocking in his
Kansas victory. But at Drake he
will be challenged by such speed-
sters as Bob Hayes of Florida
A&M, who has tied the world's
record of :09.2 seconds, and Olym-
pian Stone Johnson of Grambling,
a steady :09.4 performer.
Also in the sprint field is de-
fending champion Bill Kemp of
Baylor, who has been beaten by
Knaub at the Texas and Kansas
meets.
Expected to snuff Swafford's
hopes in the 440-yd. hurdles is
Ron Ablowich of Georgia Tech,
the defending Drake champion
who set the relays record of :52.1
seconds here a year ago.
Swafford won at the Kansas re-
lays in :52.3 seconds and took the
Texas title with a :52.6-second
clocking.
Bernard Defends
Cunningham's bid for the 120-
yd. high hurdles title will be chal-
lenged by Bobby Bernard of Texas
Christian, the defending cham-
pion. Cunningham nudged Ber-
nard at the Texas and Kansas
carnivals, winning in :14.2 sec-
onds at Texas and in :13.9 at
Kansas.
Hansen is one of three 15' vault-
ers in the college and university
pole vault field. The Rice ace
scored 15'-6" at Texas and
15'-6"% at Kansas.
Dexter Elkins of Southern
Methodist and Bayt s Bennett of
Texas have not matched those
vaults but are consistent 15' per-
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W 1L Pct. GB
Cleveland 7 4 .636 -
Detroit 6 5 .545 1
New York 6 5 .545 1
Baltimore 7 6 .538 1
Boston 7 5 .583
Chicago 7 7 .500 11
Minnesota 7 7 .500 1,
Kansas City 8 8 .500 1%
Los Angeles 6 7 .462 2
Washington 2 9 .182 5
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Detroit 11, Kansas City 7
Boston 8, Washington 7
Cleveland 6, Los Angeles 4
Minnesota 3, Baltimore 2
(Only games scheduled).
TODAY'S GAMES
New York at Washington, night
Baltimore at Kansas City, night
Los Angeles at Detroit, night
Boston at Chicago, night
Minnesota at Cleveland, night

farmers.
Smith has slumped in a bit with
the shot recently but won at Texas
with a 57'-10" toss and took the
Kansas title with a heave of
57'-412".
Roberts Top Threat
Danny Roberts of Texas A&M,
who has marks of more than 57',
appears to be Smith's only threat.
Miller has plenty of stiff com-
petition in the broad jump, but
such challengers as Olympian An-
thony Watson of Oklahoma and
Victor Brooks of Nebraska has
been hampered by injuries this
season and have not yet matched
their leaps of past years.
Miller took the Texas title with
a leap of 24'-11" and captured the
Kansas crown by jumping 25'-6".
Finals in the 440-yd. hurdles
and the broad jump are features
of today's program which also in-
cludes an AAU pole vault field
headed by ex-Marine John Uelses,
only person ever to vault 16'.

Freshmen
Go Varsity
In ECAC
NEW YORK (AP) - Twenty-nine
of the 132 members of the East-
ern College Athletic Conference
have been given approval to use
freshmen in varsity competition
during the 1962 academic year.
Commissioner Asa S. Bushnell
pointed out yesterday that con-
ference regulations provide waiver
of the freshman rule in schools
with an enrollment of 500 or less
male undergraduates.
Schools with male undergradu-
ate enrollments of 500 or less
which have been granted the waiv-
er are Bates, Elizabethtown, Fre-
donia, Geneseo, Hartwick, Haver-
ford, Juniata, Lebanon Valley.
Lincoln, New Paltz, Oneonta,
Plattsburg, Potsdam, Susquenhan-
na, Ursinus and Yeshiva.
The other 13 are Albright, Bran-
deis, Brockport, Coast Guard
Academy, Cortland, Moravian,
Muhlenberg, N.Y. Maritime Col-
lege, St. Francis (Pa.), Swarth-
more, Merchant Marine, Academy,
Upsala and Wilkes.

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SUNDAY, APRIL 8,

1962.

A TRIUMPH
APA Visiting Repertory
Troupers Exhibit
Dedicated Elan.

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(SEE OUR NIGHTLY FLOOR DISPLAY)

iEREis a:hetening for leaving Broadway jobs and
r n opportunities, is an artistic one;
1ammn _ observable in the opportunity to play, in rep.
lower reaches. of the ertory, parts in plays of dis-
lower East Side. tinction with other actors they
The APA is the Association respect.
Of Producing Artists, .a hard-f. "This is theatre for the ac.
working, dedicated, classics-at tors r.Grizzardexplained
'tuned band '-a repertory com- cently. "It is really quite rare
pany that has been touring:the and marve ous. All the things
,provinces" from Hamilton, that are of such primary im.
Bermuda, to Milwaukee, Wis;, portance uptown-billing, dress.
%r the last two years-before ing.rooms, your position in the
settling in for . its" first. New curtain calls, money and all the
Yrk stand . What makes' then other trivia-mean nothing."
APA different hand a vindication APA is the creation of Ellis
of the actor's right to prate Rabb, a tall, thin, 31-year-old
about his dedication to the art graduate of the Antioch Shakes-
of the theatre, is the fact that peare Festival, the American
three members of the cast- Shakespeare Festival at Strat-
Paul Sparer, David Hooks and ford, Conn.
Earl Montgomery - handed in , "It has been 'the most ex-
their notices to the Broadway hilarating, and the most hard
managements of, respectively, working, experience I could pos-
.""Gideon" and "RomUl ' inain

RESERVED
SEAT
SEASON
MEMBERSHIPS
NOW!
PROFESSIONAL THEATRE
PROGRAM OFFICE,
MENDELSSOHN THEATRE

p.

mi

a

aya , tsy;A .U JI IUS.
Among the other well-known
actors who showed their rev-
erence for repertory by accept-j
ing the APA's shilling are
George Grizzard, who had to
take a cut from the four-figure -
a-week salary he had been re-
ceiving from Otto Preminger
for portraying the venomous
Senator Van Ackerman in thej
movie, "Advise and Consent";'
Rosemary Harris, Will Geer,
Gerry Jedd, Joanna Roos andi
Nancy Marchand.
All agree that the chief re-
ward, and the only valid reason

A recently signed with th
University of Michigan to pro-
duce a twenty-week season of
repertory each year for the next
three years. The university
is embarking on an expanded
on-campus cultural pro gram.
"We will play at Ann Arbor
from September to December,
then probably come to New
York, return to Ann Arbor in
February, then come back to
New York for a spring season
such as we are doing
ow" Rabb outlined.

I.

(I-

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct.
Pittsburgh 11 2 .846
x-St. Louis 7 3 .700
San Francisco 10 5 .667
Los Angeles 10 6 .625
x-Houston 6 5 .545
Cincinnati 7 8 .467
Philadelphia 5 7 .417
Milwaukee 6 9 .400
Chicago 4 11 .267
New York 1 11 .083
x-Playing night game

GB
2%
211L
4
5
51
6
8
9

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Los Angeles 12, Chicago 5
Milwaukee 10. Philadelphia 4
St. Louis at Houston (inc.)
(Only games scheduled)
TODAY'S GAMES
Chicago at San Francisco, night
Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, night
Cincinnati at St. Louis, night
Milwaukee at Houston, night
Philadelphia at New York

t~Iw9i~
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