, '$ lotrP, 12, 1948 TVHEI~ McWI 4N r I- Lemon Gains Secoi Sries I ictoryas Trl Wirs PEN Class Gordon's Homer Gives \%- ' A ttendance Champs Winning Margin i i A tNew Hioh Three D As Lemoi A record number of 1,374 stu- dents are participating in this That, as it turn year's PEM program, the most last the Indians extensive physical educational He struck out He plan ever undertaken at the Uni- inning, and in t versity. out Bearden, Bob The whole purpose of the physi- Larry Doby. cal education staff is directed ries triumph, was toward presenting a program that it before the Bras emphasizes developing skill in a in the eighth. particular, sport through instruc- * * tion, and allowing. the aspirant DOUBLES BY athlete to practice his choice and Manager Lou through use of the Waterman put Cleveland in Gym and I-M facilities. third. BECAUSE OF THE record en- Inhe fourth rollment, only a few sections have his dribbler down room for more students. Badmin - hli.lereached ton, wrestling, fencing, boxing and line. He reached gymnastics sections are still open walk. Mike McCj for any student interested in sign- him around with ing up before the year gets any center field. further along. For the second successive year Gordon opened golf leads the list as the most pop- barriade. Ithome ular student choice, but, due to cuit smash of the the scarcity of equipment and c s o room at the I-M building, the en- THE INDIANS rollment has been held to 123. second score of t Tucker drew a wall SWIMMNG CLASSES have the on Robinson's s top enrollment with 221 largely righ aobno race h because all non-swimming fresh- right and raced hoc men are required to take the htbe a ou course so that they can be accept- have been aSdau ed in outside paddling circles. peg at seoand for Basketball with 214 enrolled pied atsoisn po gets the nod for second place pop- the reddouble, but e ularity, then there is a long drop the ball bounce fr to tennis with 130 and weight-lift- Lemon said al ing with 62. that he simply The participation of auditing eighth. Three students has also reached a new helped him out o high, and with the new freshman ler innings, but t crop present the combination in too deep. promises to produce PEM's most Holmes opened successful season. pelting a single to flied out, but Tor Louis Tours Nation sharp double down line to hustle Ho BOSTON - (A') - Heavyweight third. Champion Joe Louis is going to * * barnstorm the country with ex- LEMON walked hibition bouts in a dozen big cities, bases. That was Boston fight promoter Sam Sil- called a halt and verman announced yesterday. Bearden. Al O'Grady's HOLi BARBERS the Most Tal Let us cut your hair. Pipe Mixture You'll wish before that * you had learned to care. A.ro i 6 BARBERS the pack... And you won't wait Amtic 1 'Cause our barbers the pipe have an even gait. 1110 S. University Telephone 6140 H1liday C Humi ouble Plays Help Victors n Tires in Later Innings C J ed out, was the saw of Spahn. gan to end the he ninth struck Kennedy, and r his second se- well in sight of ves ganged him Dale Mitchell Boudreau had front in the Bob Elliott got failed to field the third base second as Bill Lemon for a. armick brought a smash into the sixth with over the left Joe's 33rd cir- year. eked out their he inning when k, moved around harp single to me as Hegan hit tually, it should ble-play to end ky took Elliott's r the force and enty of time for arl Torgeson let om his mitt. fter the game tired in the double - plays If jams in earl-' his time he got the inning by center. Al Dark geson rapped a n the right field llmes around to * Elliott to fill the when Boudreau wig-wagged for DA- ked About in America The crowd, though hostile to the Indians, gave the southpaw a pleasant greeting as he strolled in. So tense and silent were the fans as Bearden pitched to Con- atser that the voices of the Cleve- land infielders yelling encourage- ment to the lefty could be heard clearly in the grandstand. Conat- ser's fly to Tucker gave Holmes plenty of time to scamper home. And then Masi, pinch-hitting for Bill Salkeld, really caught hold of one. For a moment it looked as if the ball might clear the fence, but it banged against the boards high up and bounced back as Torgeson roared home and Elliott reached third. The Winnah! - -- -------- Z - ---- r firom ihe GRANTSTAND By MURRAY GRANT... Daly Sports Editor Those mistakes that the Wolverines committed in the first two games of the season were not in evidence last Saturday as the Maize and Blue rolled into high gear and smothered Purdue's hopes for a banner season. PETE ELLIOTT didn't make a mistake. He called a fine game and that was the major difference between Michigan's past perform- ances and the sterling job done Saturday. He would pull in the line by sending Tom Peterson through guard or center and then send Ortmann around the ends or have the Milwaukee youth pass into the unprotected zones. In past games there had been no rhyme or reason to Elliott's calling, and, since the Michigan system is based on a series or group of plays, the experts said the Wolverines were bogging down. BUT THE TOW-HEADED STAR got those sequences down pat and Michigan began to roll. Now it's going to be awfully tough to stop them. Northwestern, however, looms mightly large on the horizon and this will probably be the ball game of the year. To the victor The Wildcats have been more than tough thus far. They've nailed- the scalps of UCLA, Purdue, and Minnesota to their locker room doors; and with the smell of roses in their nostrils, they will be loaded for bear this Saturday. CLEVELAND AB Mitchell, If .......4 Kennedy, If .......1 Doby, rf ..........4 Boudreau, ss ......3 Gordon, 2b.......4 Keltner, 3b.......4 Tucker, cf .........3 Robinson, lb ......4 Hegan, c ..........4 Lemon, p ..........3 Bearden, p ........1 R 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 a H 1 0 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 0 .0 O 3 1 1 2 3 0 3 12 2 0 0 A () 0 0 2 3 3 1 0 2 3 1 * * * * UPSA DAISY-Purdue backfield man Bob Agnew (lower right) performs a summersault, balancing on one hand, after being spilled by Michigan Center, Dan Dworsky, in the first quarter of last Saturday's game. Coming in to help Dworsky in the tackle were Michigan back Dick Kempthorn (38) and end Ozzie Clark (86). Purdue guard Bill Horvath (56) was also spilled on the play. The Boilermakers gained two yards on this effort, but it was of little help as they were forced to punt two plays later. THINGS ARE PICKIN' UP: improved Play Boosts'M Title Hopes THEY'VE DISPLAYED THE ABILITY to come from behind as they did Saturday. They've got the best backfield in the Conference with six men who can really carry the leather. Their starting backfield consists of Don Burson at quarter- back, Frank Aschenbrenner and Tom Worthington at thehalves, and Art Murakowski at full. So when the Wolverines seek their 18th -straight victory they'll be facing a team that sees the Rose Bowl on the horizon, and will try desperately not to let anything stand in their way of reaching that goal. nD Totals.... ..35 4 10 27 15 I F I BOSTON AB Holmes, rf.........5 Dark, ss ..........4 Torgeson, lb ......4 Elliott, 3b .........3 Rickert, if ........3 Conatser, cf ......1 Salkeld, c .........2 Masi, c...........1 M. McCormick, cf-lf 4 Stanky, 2b ........1 *Ryan ............0 Voiselle, p.........1 **F. McCormick ...1 Spahn, p ..........0 ***Sisti ...........1 Totals...........31 *-Ran for Stankyi R H 0 1 2 1. 0 1 0 ' 1 1 5 1 1 3 4 0 0 50 0 o 0 0 0 4 1 0 1 3 0 1 2 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 9 27 in ninth. 0 r ) 0 t) 1 (l 2 0 0 1 9 **-Grounded out for Voiselle in 7th. * * *-Hithinto double play for Spahn in ninth. Cleveland ........001 002 010-4 Boston ..........000 100 020-3 for FORMAL RENTALS All New - All Sizes See RABI DEAU-HARRIS 119 So. Main St. Phone 6924 By P. . S.BROWN The arim-chair q u ar te rb ac k s have been going hot and heavy on the second-guessing since all the final scores came in last Saturday evening. And the way the dopesters have it figured is that Michigan is well on the way towards grabbing its second consecutive Big Nine title, IF Northwestern or Minnesota don't upset the apple-cart. THAT'S a big "if," no matter how you look at it. But from the performance Bennie Oosterbaan's boys put on against the Riveters, the chances are excellent that Michigan can repeat. Those same "experts" who got into a huddle Sunday morning and came up with all the an- swers have it figured that the Wolverines have one distinct draw-back which would make the Conference race a toss-up, and that's their pass defense. True, Purdue did complete nine passes, but Bob DeMoss tried 22 times, and, for an aerialist of his caliber, the percentage isn't very impressive. And most of the nine completions were between the two thirty yard line stripes. WHEN THE CHIPS were down and Purdue penetrated beyond the 30, the tosses were knocked down. That's where they really count. There can be no denying Michigan's superb ground bloc. SPOUTS SEYMOUR SONKIN, Night Editor The lads Stu Holcomb hoped to take to the Rose Bowl found a veritable stone wall in front of them, All together, the highly- touted Norb Adams, Harry Szul- borski, and Bob Agnew plunged for only 36 yards. But the defense was no surprise. The goal line stand the Wolverines chucked into the faces of Oregon last week was the tip-off. They did it again against Purdue. WHAT WAS AMAZING was the offense. The first two games of the year were squeakers. Michi- gan didn't show anything in the way of a satisfactory ground at- tack. Blocks were missed; the line was out-charged; the deception of the '47 team was gone. That the whole team improved immensely is beyond question. The blocking was vicious and timely; the line opened the holes; and some of the finesse that characterized Bob Chap- puis and the rest returned. Especially eye-pleasing was the Freshmen too; It's Edited for You; NCN The Artstry in Rhythm of work of the offensive guards and tackles. They pulled out of the line with ease and they didn't miss their blocks. As an example, there was the bone-crusher Capt. Dom Tomasi threw at the Purdue line- backer on Wally Teninga's 13-yard scamper around end for the fifth Wolverine score. IF THE CHUNKY field pilot had missed, there would have been no gain, but he didn't fail and Teninga went over unhampered. There is work to be done. The Wildcats have their eyes on the roses of Pasadena and they'd like to have Michigan down as one of their victims, if for pres- tige only. The pass defense can be im- proved; the deception can be worked on; and all the other small rough spots can be ironed out. And Gene Derricotte will prob- ably be back. The hard-luck speedster ran through signal plays at practice yesterday, heralding his imminent return to action. Tunnicliff Hurt EVANSTON, Ill. - (A) = Half- back Ed Tunnicliff suffered a badly bruised shoulder in North- western's 19-16 triumph over Minnesota and may be withheld from the crucial Michigan battle Saturday. JUNE CHRISTY ""D NAT"ONA"LYFAMOUS*INSR"MENTALIST HILL AUDITORIUM Sunday, Oct. 17, 8:30 P.M. Sponsored by Wolverine Club BOX OFFICE OPENS OCT. 13 MEN OF MICHIGAN Be suave, individualistic, and handsome-looking with our "crew-flat .top" or a Person- ality style. Queries invited- -9 BARBERS - NO WAITING- Dascola Barbers Liberty off State SOCIAL CHAIRMAN Looking for a favor for your Christmas Party that is new different, and within your budget? L. G. BALFOUR CO. 1319 S. Univ. Ph. 9533 o so comes is a 160w. W. Ridhmomd vizgs~r ;/ ,, For the BEST in BOOKS Buy at rFOLLETT'S State Street at North University w 1,000,000 GARGOYLES for the price of 800,000 .f.t. or ..o. 5 for the price of 4 /HeS rTh(L &~r~~i( I ANL IN DRAMATI;C 301,DAYTEST.1, -"4: TIlS TEST REVEALED