THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ,I I~ IW FROM THE PRESS BOX l By JOHN THOMAS The Press Box Is Dead-Long Live The Press Box111 SOMETIME SOMEWHERE SOMEONE heard a swan ding, or said he did. See How the generously necked bird sounded was never accurately described, but it was poor enough to be judged the nadiric conclusion of anything and all things. That, at least, is my interpretation of this "Swan Song" idea ... and the melody follows. It's "Varsity Down the Field" with a Maize and lue mood bred into every one that has ever witnessed Wolverine teams in action. Composed of Circuit "Men of Michigan" in every connotation of that famed phrase, each con- Petos test in which they play exhibits the traditional courage, spirit, will to win, which have made them outstanding in an athletic-minded nation. Their co-operation and loyalty is united with a creed of sportmanship which has B borne an unswerving faith in the undergraduate bodies and alumni.K The "Champions of the West" have won their colors and have kept Ken Ma them flying, but always in the background has been the concrete reason e in for their immediate success. The background is a mural portrait of the times at 1 Michigan men . . . Neil Snow, etc., in the past . .. Harry Kipke and Benniein overco Oosterbaan etc., in the near past . . . Norm Daniels, Harry Newman, Ivan team on F Williamson, Ted Petoskey, Charles DeBaker etc., in the present. And with The a these, shoulder to shoulder, are the men of the present staff of coaches and iThe seo members of the Athletic Board. Yost, the grand old man who has been Wistert h Destiny to Michigan athletes, Chubk Hoyt--the man who conditions the sacrific, g teams and turns out winning track teams year after year, Harry Kipke- and put t with his football champions, Cappy Cappon-Yost's assistant and now His bat basketball mentor, have all taken up the torch which burns brighter and rich's fast brighter as they carry i. past the As a sport writer for The Daily, it has been my privilege to know these base line, men better than the average student. Impressed by the cool calculation of the Bucke the team tactics and by their taut nervousness in tense moments it is only ball, Man necessary to know the men behind the scenes to get the full picture. There with sever have been locker rooms with tactical -- - -Peto designs on blackboards and these diana and Ohio. But pinciplibly Ted Pet same rooms filled with sweating, through the efforts of Wolfe, Moisio, to score M bruised, and even sobbing men. I and Hill, each of whom got seconds sixth inni have seen beaten teams come in from when they were not expected to fin- deep left the field to return in ten minutes ish better than fifth, the meet was the ball 1 and to go "on to victory" 'And I've won. Captain Ed Russell drew the Petoskeyi seen defeated men, with the whistle outside lane in the 440, cut across safe. The that meant the loss still ringing in to the pole at the turn against ae their ears, being brought-back to nor- head wind, and won. Only he could a sies mal by these men behind the scenes. have done that, a Michigan Captain.E all singles It has all been Michigan Athletics Agsoin this year Michigan is rted be- suprt, i to me and instead of leather bound low Indiana, but see if they don't polte books fittingly describing it, there come through, comeback after an in- theo hiv have been hastily written stories door defeat, to carry on the tradition ioulhits, with black headlines over 7%'/2 point of a winner! behind hi type. "From The Press Box," as a name, bhalls at i was original with me. Undoubtedly alat And that's another chorus of my as o enusedtbefenbtearystruck ou cacophonious swan song. A chorus ithas een used before, but I swear Sco of 'a half hour to press time,' tick- hat I did not copy it or any part Waterbo ing typewriters, 'cut that down of it. The column has run everyday with- inning bu Thomas,' witha 'copy! copy! copy!' out a break since the first of the Braendlea crescendo. Someone has said that otabeksnetefrto h oces o.get the smell of pint year. Of this I am more proud than the big once youprinter's anything else. The record cannot be ,walked an ink in your nose you can never forget duplicated in recent years in Daily threw wid it. He was wrong. It's not ink thatdhity Diiley - als glutsyou.It's hat horus Andhistory. ile-as gets you. It's that chorus. And I have been led to believe that it the error. more than that, it's the sound of a has been popular by its response. It baum's sa $10,000 fiat-bed press grinding off is not easy to misspell a name and on Manue the first few copies of a story with then be taken for a ride for it for Ted Pet your bylie on it. ithe next week. That is the way to inning wit The spirit surrounding Michigan find out whether it is read or not, Wistert g athletics seems to be carried into to have a mistake in it. vanced to every student activity. And here it is In case a future editor writes one fice, nothi greater, even though less intense, for everyday for the year, give him baum and surviving the individual competition credit. It means a lot of work and walked. and resultant politics. That it has little pay. And I wonder if you get Ohi remained is remarkable. That an in- as much out of it as you put in it, Only 23 stitutional growth and a collegiate like the textbooks say? first six in reaction which spelled pseudo-so- And so, coaches, players, and true the seven phistication should have meant its sport fans, who are the salt of the to second loss to the undergraduate group as a earth. THE PRESS BOX IS DEAD- to thirdc whole is lamentable. At one time LONG LIVE THE PRESS BOX. scored on school spirit may have been out of . drew Difte proportion, now is too unnoticed. In BOX SCORE the first b time itsshall and must return. Michigan AB i II PO A E Waterbor But swans don't. They sing their Artz, rf.......... 4 0 0 2 0 0 Athoug song and like a stinging bee they're Waterbor, 2b .... 3 0 1 2 3 0 and more through. Braendle, lf ......3 0 0 2 0 0 the team I'd like to take this last opportun- Petoskey, cf ......4 1 1 2 0 0 Waterbor ity to put across one thought fre- Wistert, p ........2 1 0 0 1 0 keystonec quently missed by sport followers. Diffiey, c ........1 1 0 9 1 1 one-sided Does sortsmanship and clean play Teitelbaum, ss ... 4 0 0 2 1 1 could tur really pay? Manuel, lb ...... 3 1 2 8 0 0 match tho It does! It tells on the victory side Oliver, 3b .......4 0 0 0 0 1 - of Michigan's book of Athletics. - -~ - ~-- -FOR Major Griffith made up a list of Totals .... ...28 4 4 27 6 3 offensive points scored and defensive Ohio State AB R I H PO A E record of each of the BigTen schools Prosenjak, rfs 3 0 1 2 0 0 VERI three years ago. Then he asked 19 Colburn, cf, ss. 5 0 0 2 0 0 officials who work Conference games Blue, If, cf ....... 4 0 0 1 0 0 to rate the schools in sportsmanship Lewis, ss, 3b...... 4 0 1 2 4 0 and clean play from one to 10. The Clawson, 2b ......3 0 0 1 1 1 19 officials rated Michigan first in McAfee, 1b ...... 4 1 1 8 0 0 sportsmanship and first in clean-play. Reilley, 3b ......0 0 0 1 1 2 Griffith's list also had Michigan at Hale, if ......... 2 0 1 3 0 0 the top in offensive points and at the Sharp, c .........3 0 0 3 1 0 ~/ top of the list for their defensive Ulrich, p......... 4 0 1 1 2 1 record. Sportsmanship and clean Rubin ......... 1 0 0 0 0 0 play pay - And one last example of Michigan Totals ........33 1 5 24 9 4 - Spirit. "zBatted for Sharp in 9th. Michigan lost the indoor Confer Ohio State.....000 000 100-1 ence track meet last year. After the Michigan ...........030 001 00*-4 last event, the team trouped back in- -Home runs -- Manuel, Petoskey. to the dressing room thoroughly dis- Stolen bases-Waterbor, Braendle, appointed with themselves. McAfee, Hale. Sacrifice hits-Difiley Charlie Hoyt came in, sized up the k2), Waterbor. Struck out-By Wis- situation, and then told them that tent, 7; by Ulrich, 3. Bases on balls they had done very well indeed, in -Off Wistert, 4; off Ulrich, 4. Hit fact "Darn good." Brooker Brooks by pitcher---By Wistert (Reilley) ; by F RA looked up and said, "Yes Coach, But Ulrich (Diffley). Wild pitch-Ulrich. P H01 we're a MICHIGAN team." Left on bases-Ohio State, 10: Mich- T C .This same team in the outdoor igan, 8. Umpires-Slavin and Sny- Tw3 NU meet was doped to finish behind In- 'der. Time of game-2:00. ehiCa ; Ba3ts TouceS10tate, iers Feature ond Vicory Successioni Drives By Maniel, key Pave Way"For ,iotfa Wolverines y JOHN THOMAS nue threw caution to the a wild hitting streak that iomer and a single in four bat to aid Whitey Wistert ing Ohio State's baseball erry Field yesterday, 4 to 1. iky first baseman's homer ond with one aboard, after ad scored on Teitelbaeum's :ave Michigan three runs he game away. caught one of Marvin Ul- ones and lined it 10 yards yellow flag on the third just safely inside. Although yes had a fast relay of the fuel came in standing up al feet to spare. skey's Homer In Sixth oskey also clouted a homer Michigan's other run in the ng. He pushed the ball in center but a fast relay of back to the -catcher made dive to the plate to be decision was close. Wistert allowed fivehits, but kept them well scat- had the benefit of good n spite of three errors by -ines. Ulrich allowed only two homers and two ut had four costly errors n and issued four bases on nopportune times. Wistert t seven and Ulrich three. re Three In Second )r bunted safely in the first t nothing came of it as and Petoskey flied out. In second inning, Wistert d went to third as Ulrich e to first on Diffley's bunt. o advanced to second on Whitey scored on Teitel- crifice and Diffley came in l's homer for three runs. oskey started out the sixth th a homer and, although t on on an error and ad- second on Diffiey's sacri- ng came of it as Teitel- Oliver flied out as Manuel o Pulls Double Steal men faced Wistert for the nings, but he weakened in th. McAfee hit and went on Hale's single. He went on Waterbor's error and a double steal as Hale ey's throw to second and aseman came home before could throw it back. hi there was less hiting errors on Michigan's part, played better baseball. demonstrated that the combination was not all in brilliancy as he, too, n in sensational plays to se of Teitelbaum. BEST RESULTS USE CHROME FILM N CISCO-BOYCE TO COMPANY veniently Located Stores miversity 108 E. Liberty Egleston Stars 1 Chwan Golf Ce 1HI TriltmhS ver Buckeyes X VcrTeR Gainl ,Revenge For Ohio Victory Last, y car; ViE c011i' Ias 74 By ART CARSTENS Michigan's golf team gained re- venge for last year's defeat at the hands of Ohio State by trouncing the Buckeyes, 17? 2 to 2, in a dual meet ore ,the University ;ourse here yes. terday Ga ver and Kelly -kept the Wolver- incs from making a clean sweep when 'hey took '2 point to Fischer's and David's 2 in the morning four- somes, Johnny Fischer's 74, to take three points from Garver in the singles' was the low score of the day al- though all four Wolverines shot what o lernie k I t 1:'.e u Keyes i.- = SDNEY FRANKEL Reversing last year's defet by the same score, the Michigan Varsity tennis team yesterday beat the Buck- e in an interestin1g meet at Ferry 'ield, 4 to 2. Meeting an almostt eqully green team cotxpoed entirely of first year varsity men, the Wolverines. led by Captain Dick Snell, played a vastly superior game. In the sin les matches Michigan was forced to lose the contest be- tween the two No. I na on both team xn hen Chambero of Ohio State won over Siegal, 6-3. 4-6. 4-6, but managed to take the rest. Snell, playing No. 2 for Michigan, easily \von his bout from Poppleton in two sets. 6-2 and 6-4. NiscT beat Clymer in two hard sets, -4 and 7-5. Clint Hawley Egleston, running in the j last dual meet or his track career yesterday, won the hurdles to con- tribute to Michigan's '76 to 60 vic- tory over Illinois. Softball Titles Are Decided FIOTIC14)OW. Coach Trueblood called "very good Three softball league champion- golf." Dayton had a 75, David 76 ships will be determined Monday at and Sweet 78, while the Buckeyes' tlow score was an 80 turned in by 5:15 p. m. on Ferry Field. In addi- Kelly. tion, one regularly-scheduled chami.- pionship playoff will be held. Those teams fighting for their league championships are Beta Theta Phi and Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kamma Sigma and Sigma Nu, and Alpha Tau Omega and Delta Kappa Epsi- lon. Phi Beta Delta and Acacia will tangle in the first regular playoff. At 5:15 p. m. Wednesday Delta Chi will meet the winner of the first League Championship game and Phi Alpha Delta will play the win- ner of the second match. Two regular playoffs are sched- uled for Tuesday at 5:15 between Phij Lambda Kappa and Tau Delta Phi,I Delta Tau Delta and Psi Upsilon. The victory was doubly sweet to Fischer and Dayton since they were on the Michigan team last year when the Buckeyes defeated them 15X to 2,<~. It was the only dual meet de- feat suffered by the Wolverines, who went through to a Conference title and second place in the National Intercollegiates. Just as the Wolves were at a dis- advantage last year in playing the Buckeyes over the latter's home course. the Ohio team was handicap- ped yesterday through their lack of acquaintance with the University layout. A high wind swept the course dur- uig the enti-e morning and afternoon matches. .. -: ... HERE'S no Eenie Meenie, Meinie Mo in Goldman Bros. Cleaning Value! No guesswork! No "Try This". or "Try That" methad! Goldman Bros. Knowledge of "Knowing How" has been the secret of their ability to w1n and hold their custom- ers for over 20 years in Ann Arbor! Thinking people have always bought, and will continue to buy VALUE... Just value! ML C L E A N E X1 BOOKS Very Helpful BOOKS We Carry a Complete Stock of the STUDENTS OUTLINE SERIES...........75c EACH EACH OXFORD REVIEW SERIES.............. 68c COLLEGE ENTRANCE SERIES...........60c EACH LAWSTUDENTS' HELPS - OUTLINES