PAM THE MICH IS1N DAIlLY TUESDAY, OCT. 6, 1642'. P'AO3 ~ir TUIISDAY, OCT. 8, 194~3' Cards Take World's Championship From Yanks Training Table Helps Michigan Gridders Stay In Fighting Trim' Rookie Kurowski Paces Red Birds To 4-2 Win. Johnny Beazley Hurls Sparkling Game To Vanquish Yanks Despite Numerous Cardinal Errors v 11 By BOB SHOPOFF Feeding fifty fighting football players is no small job. To keep the Maize and Blue gridders in top physi- cal shape, plenty of grub flows into the Michigan Union dining room ev- ery evening where the hungry Wol- verine stars eat after a tough three- hour practice. However, contrary to the popular belief that football players have a bottomless stomach, the Michigan team does not have any exceptionally large eaters. If one man stands out above the rest, it is big Bill Baldwin, 210-pound tackle for the Varsity. Bill puts the other fellows to shame by the way he digs in when chow is put in front of him. The rest have an appetite which is natural of a man that has-just worked hard. The training table for Big Ten football teams was installed four years ago because it was believed that by this method the coaches would have better control over the players' diet. Since certain foods are harmful to the gridders' physical condition, strict supervision of their daily diet is kept. Through the cooperation of the Union dietitians and Coach Fritz, Crisler and his aides, Michigan play- ers are assured of top rate food at all times. Foods which are prohibited at the training table are all varieties of fried foods and any pastries or rich desserts. The typical menu for Crisler's charges includes a first course of ei- I ther fruit juice or soup. This is fol- lowed by a large serving of meat, potatoes, two varieties of vegetables, a salad, plenty of rolls and butter plus a pint of milk. Dessert usually is ice cream or some type of pudding. Meat is the large item on the menu. Any rationing program which will re- duce the supply of meat will certainly hit the Michigan football team hard. Steaks are most popular with the gridders and, these include porter- house, T-bone, and tenderloin which come in 22 ounce cuts. At this rate, the Maize and Blue football players eat 154 ounces of meat while the pro- posed ration of meat would allow only 40. Other meats which go into the pre- scribed diet are ham, leg of lamb, a half of broiled chicken and occa- sionally turkey. Beef is the biggest meat item with the Michigan grub- hounds. At one sitting the team puts away 20 gallons of fruit juice, 70 nounds of meat, over fifty pints of milk and sev- eral bushels of vegetables and pota- toes. Some of the players have fav- orite foods which they really go after. Paul White, Michigan's tough half- back, drinks pint after pint of butter- milk. Buttermilk is also popular with several of the coaches. Ice cream is a great favorite with some players putting away as many as eight help- ings at one meal. (Continued from Page 1) ing less than superb, opened the ninth with a sharp single to right-center and was sacrificed to second. Charley (Red) Ruffing, the old Yankee wheelhorse who pitched hit- less ball for 7 2/3 innings in the opener at St. Louis, striking out Kur- owski three straight times and get- _ r------------- WHITEY KUROWSKI ting credit for New York's only tri- umph of the series, then went to work carefully on the tow-headed rookie third baseman from Reading, Pa. Kurowski Homers He got the count to one and one and served up a half-speed pitch that must have hung exactly where Kur- owski wanted it, because he took a lusty swing and the ball made one big arc into the lower stands. It was a knockout and everyone knew it, although the Yanks got two men on base with none out in their final chance. The Cardinals re- sponded to this threat with typical stamina. Joe Gordon opened with a single and second baseman Jimmy Brown fumbled' an easy roller by Bill Dickey.However, Gordon was picked off second on a beautiful throw by Cooper. Brown redeemed himself by running onto the grass to scoop up a blooper. by Gerry Priddy, and- then Brown threw out pinchhitter George Selkirk for the final out as the crowd rose into a demonstration that hardly could have been louder or more ap- preciative if it had been at Sports- man's Park in St. Louis. The defeat was the Yanks' first in nine World Series since 1926 and also the first time that any one pitcher had beaten them twice in a series since Jess Haines and old Grover Cleveland Alexander each accom- plished that assignment in '26. Rizzuto Tees Off Beazley, cool and calm as an ice- berg, was tagged for a home run by little Phil Rizzuto the first time he took his bat off his shoulder in lead- ing off for New York in the first in- ning. But it didn't faze the sensa- tional young right-hander, who won 21 games in the National League this season, and he did not get rattled either when the Yanksmade explo- sive gestures in the fourth and fifth frames. Enos (Country) Slaughter, playing his first and last World Series before entering the Army, had tied the score with a homer into the right-field stands to open tlh.e fourth and the Yanks battled back for a run in their half of the same inning. Red Rolfe led off with a drag bunt down the first base line, beat it out for a single and raced-on to second as Beazley made a wild throw after fielding the ball. Rolfe advanced to third on a long fly by Roy Cullenbine Continued On Page 7, Col. 6 * * * Nice Going, Cards! St. Louis (N. L.) AB R H 0 A E Brown, 2B ........3 0 2 3 3 2 T. Moore, CF.......3 1 1 3 0 0 Slaughter, RF .....4 1 2 2 0 0 Musial,LF........4 0 0 2 0 0 W. Cooper, C ......4 1 2 2 1 0 Hopp, 1B .........3 0 0 9 2 1 Kurowski, 3B .....4 1 1 1 1 0 Marion, SS .......40 0 3 5 0 Beazley,P ........4 0 1 2 0 1 TOTALS .........33 4 9 27 12 4 New York (A.L.) AB R H O A E Rizzuto, SS .......4 1 2 7 1 0 Rolfe, 3B.........4 1 110 0 Cullenbine, RF ....4 0 0 3 0 0 DiMaggio, CF .....4 0 1 3 0 0 Keller, LF ........4.0 1 1 0 0 Gordon, 2B .......4 0 1 3 3 0 Dickey, C .........4 0 0 4 0 0 Stainback, Z ......0 0 0 0 0 0 Priddy, 1B........3 0 0 5 1 1 Ruffing, P ........3 0 1 0 1 0 Selkirk, ZZ .......1 0 0 0 0.0 TOTALS ........35 2 7 27 6 1 Z-Ran for Dickey in 9th. ZZ-Batted for Ruffing in 9th. St. Louis (N. L.) ... .000 101 002-4 New York (A. L.) ... .100 100 000-2 Runs batted in-Rizzuto, Slaugh- ter, DiMaggio, W. Cooper, Kurowski, 2. Home runs-Rizzuto, Slaughter, Kurowski. Sacrifices-Hopp, Terry Moore. Double plays-Gordon, Riz- zuto and Priddy; Hopp, Marion and Brown. Left on bases-New York 7; St. Louis 5. Earned runs-New York 2; St. Louis 4. Bases on Balls-Ruf- fing 1 (Brown); Beazley 1 (Priddy). Strike outs-Ruffing 3 (T. Moore, Beazley 2) ; Beazley 2 (Gordon, Ruf- fing). Umpires-Magerkurth (N.L.) Plate;. Summers. (A.L.). iB;. Barr (N.L.) 2B; Hubbard (A.L.) 3B. Time 1:58. Attendance-69,052 (Paid). .. All eligible sopsombres and sec- ond-semester freshmen desiring to become a member of the Sports Staff are invited to report at the Sports Desk of the Daily Wednes- day afternoon at 3:30 p. m. There is a large possibility that men on the staff will be forced to leave school due to the draft, and wo- men are cordially invited to be- come members. Bud Hendel, Sports Editor World Series Notes.... YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Oct. 5.--UP)-Well, it's all over, chums. And if you don't believe it either, just think how Joe McCarthy feels. A guy named Kurowski, out of Reading, Pa., busted it up with a homer. Wanna know why? It seems Whitey can't sleep on trains, and he didn't want to have to take that long ride back to St. Loo tonight in case the Yanks carried the series into the sixth game. So, to give his railroad insomnia a break, he hit the jackpot off Red Ruffing. Kurowski is the same socker who hit the homer to beat the Dodgers 2-1 on Sept. 12 and put the Cards in a tie for first place in the Na- tional League race. That's a nasty habit the kid has. The Cards' dressing room after the game was a nice quiet place for a guy with a nervous breakdown. They were running around and hollering so much you'd think they just won the World Series. Come to think of it, that's just what they did. The Yanks' club-room was like the upstairs office in the First National Bank, with the president wondering whether he ought to loan Luke Glutz a fast fifty. Before the game, Beazley was about as nervous as the inside of your icebox. He sat on the dugout steps whistling accompaniments to the band in center field. Needless to say, his whistle repertoire in- cluded neither "The Yanks Are Coming" or "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?" The first two times the Cards took their bats off their shoulder in the first inning, the net result was a strikeout and a double play. This is how it was: Brown walked on four pitches. Moore had two strikes called on him, then fanned. Slaughter's first swing ended up in the twin killing. You can't say that was getting "the mostest of the bestest." On the other hand, the first swing Rizzuto took for the Yanks, he belted a homer. This represented one fourth of the Scooter's four-bagger produc- tion for the entire regular season. The annual Trueblood Golf Tour- nament, emblematic of all-campus honors, will get under way this com- ing week. This tourney, which is named in honor of Golf Coach Emer- itus Thomas C. Trueblood, is open to all scholastically eligible undergrad- uates except those who have won a varsity letter in golf. All those students interested should sign up in person or by phone (9191) at the University course by Friday of this week -in order that the first round may start over the week-end. In the past there has been a qualify- ing round of which the lowest 16 were paired off and bracketed, but this year there will be no qualifying round, insteadthe players will be seeded insofar as possible and match play will start immediately. Coach Ray Courtright, however, advises that no erstwhile linksman sign up who does not shoot consis- tently in the low 80's, for in former years the winning score has always been in the 70's. It is hoped that there will be aj large turnout for the event. Not only is it one of tradition and importance, but also many potential varsity golf- ers have been discovered in this way. Golf Tourney Begins This Week Men who considered themselves dub- bers have played good enough to war- rant invitations, and even berths on the varsity squad. Both Coach Court. right and Professor Trueblood would like to see last year's freshman num- eral winners, and also linksmen of the present freshman class, try for the all-campus title. Weleome Class of '46 The Barber Shop of Michigan Men extends a hearty greeting to all of you. We hope that you will drop in for the haircuts that make Michigan Men stand. out smartly. For a real "Per- sonality Haircut", one that is exactly tailored to your indi- vidulself,,or for the famous "Crew Cut", for scalp treat- ments and facials you'll want to try ... The Daseola Barbers 'Between State & Mich. Theaters. y o: * - -4 MICHIGAN'S ,%a ae BEER .RIGHT FROM THE CYPRESS CASKS OF GOEBEL Goebel Brewing Company, Detroit, Michigan . , It ...- ' ... '' _ _ N EWS ...by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS INSIDE WASHI'NGTON by DREW PEARSON OPINIONS... by SAMUEL GRAFTON PUN'CHY CARTOONS by JAMES FITZPATRICK We'd bet our last dollar that Drew Pearson, Samuel Graf ton, and James Fitzpatrick are angling for top honors on Hitler's list of Americans-to-be-executed. Well, Hitler should be hopping mad at this year's Mich- igan Daily - we've signed up all three of them. Der Fuehrer knows that Drew Pearson gives us a steady diet of inside, exclusive Washington news. He breaks into a cold sweat whenever he sees a Grafton column, slugging it out day after day with the men and ideas that are this nation's enemies. And he's afraid of his own shadow every time he sees one of Fitzpatrick's fighting cartoons. The Daily's 2:15 A.M. deadline brings you the latest Associated Press war news in this area! ' t ,: .. 'k " :. , .;;. . ,w., ::_:;..:.'. .d F i> i2" . f' ?' t;' # ,;.: f. , ;: . } :ti j::: r Well. on its wary to popularity 1 i i 7 ti4 i THE NO VE S T SUIT is Nearing the Top on the "Wit Parade" "I've Got a Gai in Kalamazoo" NEEDLED BY STEIN BLOCH Though it has been growing in acceptance, the No-Vest suit is now going ahead by leaps and bounds. Like many, many, others, once you go without a vest you will find to your sur- prise that it will never be missed. Try on a Stein-Bloch No. vest suit. - note its ease ... its new service pockets .andthe excellence of quality. . ' . .32.50 A plus comfort feature is the new SYNCHROTONE COLLAR VICTOR (52c 9by Glenn Miller Orch. BLUEBIRD (370.) Song by Four King Sisters j COLUMBIA (52c)