THE MICHIGAN DAILY FAG~i TRER -- Immommom IN T HIS CORNE R By MEL FINEBERU Of MiceAnd Men ... This is the story of an athlete named Irvin who managed to overcome it. Twenty and some odd years ago, Irvin Lisagor was hustled into this world in a town he claims was in the South. The name of the city eludes us at the moment but it is unimportant. A few years later, this Irvin fellow gave hints of the iconoclasm that was to mark him in his young manhood when he perverted Horace Greeley's advice and went North to another small town. This name doesn't elude us-it was Chicago. So he stayed there awhile probably hanging around street corners, play- ing baseball and learning long words that nobody but Webster and he had ever heard of. High school came and went and Irvin played amateur ball around Chicago, went to night school and kept on learning big words. Until finally he decided to come to Michigan and that is the part of the story that concerns us. First of all, Irvin was a freshman. Even he couldn't avoid that. Next year, Irvin was a sophomore and at that juncture .---his dual personality began to develop. He became, at one and the same time, a ball player and a writer on The Daily sports staff. It is said that Irvin once wrote letters to the editor and the editor couldn't understand the long words that he asked him to report post haste and in a, hurry as well to explain them. So Irvin developed another name as a result of this little incident. He has always claimed that it was modesty that caused him to call up a night editor and change his by-line to Pete but certain of his friends are almost certain that it was his one big chance to cast off the fetters the name Irvin had bound him with for so long. So he became Irvin to sports readers and Pete to sports fans. He got his big chance as a sophomore when Don Brewer, the regular shortstop was injured and docile Pete was called on to fill he gap. He did a fair job for a sophomore-that is, he stopped the passage of the balls but he either had trouble seeing first base or else he thought it was ten feet farther back than it was. There were times at bat when he got a foul and these were times of great jubilation. At the end of the school year, there was a shortage of juniors on the sports staff and so Irvin became the first sophomore tap be sports editor. The next year made Irvin a junior (how the years pile on) and then the festivities began. He was by now, a fast friend of Webster and his vocabulary was increasing so fast he even understood some of the words he wrote. But there was other work besides the pursuit of the large word; there was the football season and the' coaching situation and Irvin had the ath- lete's viewpoint. With charges and counter-charges being flung about semi- hysterically, Irvin, with the aid of Pete, was able to sift the wheat from the chaff and score a scoop of Harry Kipke's removal. But all was not milk and honey. Irvin's discussions of the University's poliey in regard to subsidization was not greeted with "well done" by some. Some people in the administration regarded.Irvin as a, subversive element and usually referred to him as.."that., person Lisagor." They even thought that "that person" had started circulating the recent "50 athletes" letter when. it was well known among the athletes that he had never even signed the letter. But we submit, 'tis all a mistake. A milder fellow than Irvin the Pete Lisagor could probably be found but not without . much search. He didn't even get mad when, last year in a baseball game with Minnesota, Andy Uram claimed that Lisagor had pushed him and then the football star triec to* pick a fight with him. If Irvin is noted for these things on the sports page, he is known for three things on the baseball field-that is,. three things besides his' wise cracks. He wears his cap at an impossible angle; he once hit a homer in his junior year and then, about twenty feet from home, launched a headlong slide for the plate while the right fielder was stumbling along on his knees after running in to field the ball (many people claim that Pete expected to be tagged out at each base and then fell down from the shock when he rounded third); he hit two homers in his last game for Michigan (the game Tigers Defeat Wes Aen, Don Canham To Try RedSox, 8-5 Comeback AfterLong Layoff Greenberg Hits Eleventh; At about 11 o-clock Sunday morn- pre-season favorite in the National Cronin Homers Twice ing two high jumpers, one a veteran Collegiates. For Wes it will mean the ____ _ wic the other a highly regarded sopho- returning of hi, former confidence, DETROIT, June 2.-(IP)-As if more, will hit the comeback trail un- the most essential feature in this preparing for the impending battle der the watchful eye of Coach Char- trade. Ever since he sustained a re- with the Yankee howitzers, the De- ley Hoyt. For both of the boys the current injury to his knee the Cleve-: troit Tigers indulged in some pretty land junior has had to fight against fair heavy-hitting exercises today to the possibility of loss of confidence. come out ahead of the Boston Red The sophomore, Don Canham, will Sox, 8 to 5, and square the series. also be trying to overcome the jinx When the laborious struggle was which has been following him since over, five pitchers had seen duty, four he hurt his ankle. Don went over six balls had been slugged out of the park feet five inches while in high school for home runs, 27 hits had bulged the and the recovery from his injury batting averages, and young Al Ben- should find him coming back to form. ton had won his first game as a Tiger. - - As an added incentive for both, The Tigers, who receive the Yan- - Coach Charley Hoyt has indicated kees here Sunday, smashed three Red that he will take them to the National Sox hurlers for 13 hits, including Hank Greenberg's eleventh homer of . sational batting streak of Pinky Hig- - gins. Pinky slapped a homer -ncd two - singles. smte d otNEW YORK, June 2.-(IP)-Joe Ja- Isthe " mis of ti B o cl cobs spoke emphatically, and as clea - stick around against an equally heavylyatehcenedortedout assault from the Sox for a bit more end of a long cigar would permit. than eight innings, but rommy " r ' d Bridges had to come to his rescue in ha licked bohe declared, in the the ninth with Boston dangerous. While most hands of both teams: - ^tomght." made merry at the plate, Flit Cramcr 3Little Joe, whose remark naturally of the Sox was the one who never got wanrejudicenm, s h out. Cramer collected five straight brages ony fixe ntoy wit hits-a double and four singles................ bright brown eyes fixed vacatyo hits-adube__nd ______in___s._ the ring where Lou Nova had becnl was declared winner ove'r Max Baer by a s against the Old Timers wth Ray WES ALLEN technical knockout a few short min- So that is Irvin, alias Pete,- alias utes before. Black Peter, alias "that person," Lisa- results of their efforts will be of the Workmen started dismantling the gor who never got his name on the greatest significance. arena, the bang of hammers provid- sports page because he ran the sport The veteran, Wesley Allen, will be ing an overtone to the clackety-clack page.u i .trying with everything he has to re- of typewriters. The lights, except Requiescat in pace, gain the form which had made him a for the brilliant glare over the ring, Gallagher Sent To Minors CLEVELAND, June 2.-(RP)--In a move designed to strengthen the New' York Yankees' pitching staff the club today sent outfielder Joe Gallagher to Newark in the International League on option in exchange for lefthander Marius Russo. Upon be- ing informed of the deal Gallagher immediately announced that he would not report to the Bears and left for his home at Buffalo, N.Y. Collegiates if they perform satisfac- torily. A good showing at the Col- legiates would make Canham and gAllencandidates for the Big .en squad which will oppose the Pacific Coast contingent the following week. Both Coaches Hoyt and Doherty feel certain that the recovery from their injuries will enable Wes and Don to recapture their old form. In The Majors American League Washington ....110 300000-4 112 Chicago .......110 020 12x-7 8 1 Haynes, Appleton and Ferrell; Lee and Tresh, Rensa. New York ....700 250 030--17 18 2 Cleveland .....100 000 310- 5 11 1 Donald and Dickey; Allen, Dobsoa, Broaca and Pytlak. National League Cincinnati .....000 000 000-A 10 0 Boston.........000 000 000-0 9 0 Moore and Lombardi; Shoffner and Lopez. St. Louis ........000 020 000-2 6 4 New York .......500 000 03x- .8 8 1 Davis, Dean, Brown, Cooper and Owen; Melton, Lohrman and Dan- ning. Only games scheduled. Picks His Two-Ton Tony went out, leaving Yankee Stadium a vast, black void. Still he sat there. He might have been trying to visual- ize what will happen on the same spot when his Tony meets Joe L)ouis June 28. He had taken the halter off Tony for the evening, and the Big Orange from Orange, N.J., had enjoyed a field day at the ringside, his squat, blimp- like body and round head bobbing around as he greeted friend and foe. He waddled into the ring for an in- troduction, standing there stroking his pumpkin paunch like a man fresh up from a Thanksgiving dinner. He greeted Louis. "I wished him luck," he explained later. Joe Jacobs again broke his reverie. "Nova looked bad and Baer looked terrible," he said. "I said before the fight that Baer must win inside of five rounds if he won at all. As soon as he came out of his corner I knew he was finished. Instead of coming out swinging with a wild flurry of punches like he used to do, he took one or two swings and let up. "I had tried to get Baer to meet Galento in Philadelphia. I told him the bout would draw $500,000 there. But no, he wanted Nova. Said Nova was a soft touch. And look what happens. 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