THE MICHIGAN DAILY FR 1m MVC Hits Recruiting At Wichita WICHITA, Kan. OP)--Wichita University received a stiff penalty from the Missouri Valley Confer- ence yesterday for paying unau- thorized expenses in recruiting a basketball player. Valley Commissioner Norvall Neve slapped a $1,000 fine and a conditional two-year ban on post- season competition on the univer- sity for the infraction. The post-season prohibition is against "competition other than NCAA sponsored and sanctioned events." Bob Donaldson, co-ordinator of athletics at the university, said the university paid expenses for a New York city man who accom- panied a player to the campus here in 1962. The conference rule on this states that "no member institu- tion may finance transportation costs incurred by relatives or friends of a prospective student athlete to visit the campus or else- where." Davis and Stegman visited the campus here in April, 1962, and Davis enrolled as a student here in the fall term of 1962. "The university paid expenses for both of them," said Donald- son. "We were clearly in viola- tion of the letter of this particular rule." "The boy (Davis) is blameless," he added. "No one holds him re-I sponsible. He's a fine young man." ChandlerSprains Ankle in Scrimmage By MIKE BLOCK Associate sports Editor When Bob Chandler hobbled onto Ferry Field yesterday after- noon, it wasn't exactly an un- familiar sight. But this time, Wolverine grid fans will be relieved to know, the senior quarterback's injury isn't at all serious. He sprained his left ankle in a pileup after running an option play during a scrimmage on Wednesday and will miss ac- tion for about a week. "At first it was thought that the ankle was broken," said the amiable signal-caller at practice yesterday. "But Dr. Coxon (A. W. Ccxon, the tpam's physician) said that what the X-rays revealed was an old break, and this was just a sprain." Major Injury Chandler suffered a major in- jury in the 1960 Michigan State game when his right knee was very badly shattered. As a result. he was out the rest of that sea- son, and was granted another year of eligibility by the Big Ten. He saw only limited action in 1961, but last year he came up with a few flashes of brillance in the otherwise dismal Wolverine sca- son. Chandler has always been re- garded as a passing quarterback, and has been praised especially for his ability to throw the long bomb. His leg injuries have cur- tailed his running game consid- erably, and head coach Bump Elliott's heart must have skipped a beat when he saw the 6'3" flinger get up slowly on Wednes- day. Chandler is otherwise in fine == Ul LEVI'S at T dys Tio'crs -S u University-across from Campus Theatre shape, weighing 195 lbs. after working on a plant job this sum- lmer. "I was down to 190 at prac- tice last year," he said, "but I generally gain weight during the season until I reach about 210." Happy About Henderson Resting a little uneasily on his crutches at practice yesterday, Chandler watched junior end John Henderson gather in a few tosses off the hand of fellow quarter- back Frosty Evashevski. And he had nothing but praise for Hen- derson. "Nine out of 10 times you can count on Henderson to be out in the open, three steps ahead of his man," he remarked. "He makes his cut so fast that it takes the defender a few seconds to figure out where he is." Needless to say, if both Chan- dler and Henderson play up to their potential, Michigan could have an aerial combination that's been sorely needed for a long time. *~ $ In other aspects of the injury department, there were just a few minor mishaps in the last couple of days of practice. Guard John Marcum suffered what was first thought to be a shoulder separation Wednesday, but it turned out to be just a bad bruise, and he should be back in a week or so. End Jim Conley seems to have recovered from a wrist operation last spring, but a bad knee which he also acquired at that time is still a little gimpy. S p e e d y sophomore halfback Dorie Reid is back in form after having missed a coupleuof days due to a bout with the flu. Banished Angel Returns j LOS ANGELES (?)-That man, -southpaw pitcher Bo Belinsky- is coming back to the Los Angeles Angels.1 Don't panic, girls, Bo won't be1 here until after Hawaii, his pres- ent club, finishes its season Sept.1 9. Angel General Manager Fred Haney announced yesterday that1 12 players were being recalled froma the club's farm teams. Six won't check in until next spring.1 Belinsky's name did lead the1 list-down in the third paragraph of the release. Bachelor Bo was sent down the river, or rather across the Pacific, early in the season. This was done, among other reasons, because nightclubbing Bo had a 1-7 record and a drastic 6.39 earned run average. Belinsky held off for weeks be- fore agreeing to report to Hawaii in the Pacific Coast League, a pol- icy which did not endear him to Haney. Finally the "new" Belinsky, who hurled a no-hitter for Los Angeles last year, got going. Last Monday in Honolulu he won his third game without a loss,' a four-hitter against league-lead- ing Spokane. A record crowd of 16,954 turned out, highest in the league this year. In four starts in Honolulu, Bo at- tracted 42,296 fans. "I'm out of the doghouse now," declared Belinsky, tossing his cap and then a dog collar, to the crowd. It seems he'd been wearing the dog collar on his ankle-his left ankle, of course. Others recalled were Mel Nelson, Tom Satriano, Ed Kirkpatrick, Charlie Dees and Bob Perry, all of whom were with the parent club earlier. The remaining six won't report until spring training. 1209 So. ALTANTA W)-A federal judge held up payment of a $3.06 mil- lion libel judgment to former Georgia Football Coach Wally Butts yesterday until action is taken on motions by Curtis Pub- lishing Co. for a new trial and a favorable judgment. U.S. District Judge Lewis R. Morgan stayed the execution of the jury-awarded judgment and spell- ed out what steps the publishing firm will take in seeking to win the court fight. Attorneys for Curtis were not available immediately for com- ment. Butts won a verdict last week that the Curtis-owned Saturday Evening Post libeled him with an article charging he and Coach Paul (Bear) Bryant of Alabama rigged a football game last fall. In his order staying the judg- ment, Morgan said a motion for a new trial would be filed by Curtis "not later than Friday." He said the publishing firm also would file by Friday a motion "for judg- ment notwithstanding the ver- dict." A motion for a judgment means Curtis will ask Morgan, who pre- sided over the trial, to rule against Butts despite the jury's verdict. Morgan also granted Curtis 15 days after the official record is made available in which to file a brief supporting its motions. In its verdict, the 12-man jury awarded Butts $60,000 general damages and $3 million punitive damages against the puolisning firm. Butts, 58-year-old former ath- letic director and coach at Geor- gia, had sued for $10 million, ir,- cluding $5 million punitive dam- ages. The judgment was the second largest ever rendered in a libel action and exceeded only by a $3.5 million verdict for John Hen- ry Faulk, a broadcaster who held that false pro-Communist labels ruined his career. He sued Aware Inc., a publication, and two in- dividuals. Butts claimed in his suit that his 35-year coaching career had been ruined by the Post article of last March 23 which said he fed pre-game .data on his team to Bryant. Attorneys for Curtis had indi- cated they would appeal. INJURY PRONE-Wolverine quarterback Bob Chandler hands ball off to fullback. Wayne Spark- man in a 1962 contest. Chandler sprained an ankle in Wednesday's practice session which will side- line him for at least a week. Aches and pains are nothing pew for the senior signal-caller. His right knee was shattered during his sophomore year against Michigan State in 1960. He was grant- ed an extra year of eligibility by the Big Ten because the injury kept him out of action for the balance of the season, DOUGH DELAYED: Butts'$ Million Sidetracked As Post Asks for ew Trial i We have LEVI'S at WIDnWILD' SA State Street. on the Campus LEVI'S in Stock at Ann Arbor Clothing 113 S. MAIN Soccer Club Organizing For Autumn Competition Bryant also has a $10 million libel suit pending against Curtis in Birmingham, Ala. The Post article shocked the col- legiate sports world and touched off numerous investigations. Probes have been conducted by the states of Georgia and Alabama, the Southeastern Conference, the National Collegiate Athletic Asso- ciation and a U.S. Senate subcom- mittee looking into gambling in sports. CASEY, WEISS: Met Brass Reported Sq uabblin PIT'TSBURGH -) - The New York Daily News, in a story by baseball 'writer Dick Young in Pittsburgh, says a split has devel- oped between Casey Stengel and General Manager George Weiss to the extent that, Stengel may not return as manager of the New York Mets next season. "Stengel wants to return. Weiss wants him to return. But Stengel will operate only under his terms --which include who shall and shall not be on the team," Young wrote, and quoted Stengel: "They want me to bring back a bunch of those failures and play them again. How can I win with them? Some of them got two chances here, and they couldn't do it. What makes him think they can do it now?" According to Young, Stengel re- ferred to several old Mets who have been shipped to Buffalo, the Mets' International League farm club, and said: "Let them get me eight or nine new players. Maybe I can win with them. I know I can't win with the ones that have been up and down." Young says the split developed at a recent meeting over the stand- ard baseball procedure to restore farmhands to the Mets' roster prior to the trading period, in or- der to give them a big league iden- tity and presumably to increase their value on the winter market. According to Young, Weiss wants to follow this procedure but Sten- gel is in strong opposition- and is demanding further unloading of players currently on the roster. "I went through hell building a pitching staff here," Young quot- ed Stengel. '" Genuine LEVI'S Galore for Men, Women and Children-All Colors 4.49 SAM_ 122E. Washington The Michigan Soccer Club, after an attempt to persuade the Varsity Athletic Department to grant the club varsity status, is once again organizing for its fall schedule. The club will play in the In- ternational Center's league again this year with competition against Indian, Afro-Arab, Chinese, Eu- ropean, Latin 'American, Turkish, and Greek teams. The club has had a mediocre record in this past competition, due mostly to the high caliber of the foreign play- ers in the league. The team is composed of under- graduate male students who would be eligible to play under Big Ten rules, in hopes that the Varsity Board might grant it varsity status so that an intercollegiate schedule might be arranged. The team will begin its practice sessions this Sunday at 2:00 at Wine Field. All persons interested are welcome .to attend this ses- sion, which is mainly for the ben- efit of the new players. The club is especially interested in scheduling a match with Mich- igan State's nationally ranked varsity team. Four other Big Ten schools have active soccer clubs with which a Michigan club might be able to arrange a schedule.The big hope is that a Big Ten con- ference might eventually take over the reigns of a soccer league. Several attempts at creating a team to play varsity soccer have railed in the past, but the club presently active feels that they are ready to play varsity com- petition. However, when several schools were contacted last year about the possibility of schedul- ing contests, the club was turned down because they lacked varsity recognition. A movement is in the planning stages for ithis fall to again peti- tion the Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athletics for cecog- nition, on a larger and more pub- licized scale. It Open Daily 9 to 5:30 Mondays until 8:30 r" SNE1848... 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