"AGE IX TTHE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1948 _ ___ _ _ _ v__ . 1'> {A: Yanks, Red Sx AM Mik w in as In ians Y a k e e t A :,1 a B osox W a llo p N :; OS,7 - 3 CRISLER SIGNS PAIR: Swanson, Murphy Fill Track, Tennis Vacancies ait SPIURTS DICK HURST, Night Editor (By The Associated Press) The Boston Red Sox postponed the fatal day of reckoning in the American League race by hammer- against Detroit. It hope. was a thinI Two new members have been added to the Wolverinecoaching staff, H. 0. Crisler, director of athletics, announced today. They are William E. Murphy, former niationally ranking am- ateur tennis- player, who will coach the Maize and Blue net squad, and Elmer Swanson, former Wolverine track and baseball star. Swanson, running for the Conference champion Wolver- ines, won both the Big Nine high and low hurdles titles in 1944. He will handle the fresh- man track squad and assist Head Coach Don Canham with the varsity. A Detroiter, Swanson ranks high on the list of versatile Michigan athletes. He was a six letter man, earning three each in track and baseball. A graduate of Northwestern High, he was ,city high and low hurdles champion in 1941. During the war, he served two and one- half years in the Marine Corps. He still holds the freshman ree- ord of :08.4 seconds for the 65 yard highs and the :07.5 mark for the 65 yard lows. Besides scoring a double vic- tory in the Conference track meet, Swanson served as a util- ity infielder on coach Ray Fish- er's 1944 baseball squad, an- other team of Conference champs. He was graduated in 1947, and assisted in coaching the indoor varsity last spring, specializing in the hurdles. During the past three baseball seasons, Swanson played with the Williamsport Grays, of the Eastern League. The new Wolverine tennis coach succeeds W. Robert Dixon, who last spring accepted an academic position at the University of Illi- nois. Murphy served as basket ball coach and athletic instructor at Navy Pier, Chicago in 1941-42. Later he joined the Navy Air Corps. As a dive bomber pilot lie received the Air Medal, Dis- tinguished Flying Cross and Navy Cross in both the Atlantic and Southwest Pacific areas. He was attached to the U.S.S. Ben- nington. Murphy is a former city of Chi- cago, Illinois, and Wisconsin and Indiana state tennis champion. 'He was a member of the runner- up national collegiate doubles team in 1939, ranked number nine in the country, and played on the Big Nine doubles team that same year. Cardinals Wint ST. LOUIS - (P) - Harry (The Cat) Brecheen chalked up his 20th victory of the season when he pitched the St. Louis Cardinals to a 4 to 1 victory over the Pitts- burgh Pirates in the night section of a day-night double header. The double win enabled the Red Birds to gain a second place tie with the idle Brooklyn Dodgers while the Pirates dropped to fourth. k * y ing Washington, 7-3, with a 15- IN DETROIT the Tigers fin- hit barrage that sliced the lead of ished off their home season here the idle Cleveland Indians to 112 today with a simple 7 to 2 win over games. the St. Louis Browns on Teddy The die hard men of McCarthy Gray's seven-hit pitching and a now are sure to cling to a mathe- 12-hit attack of their own off matical chance until Saturday af- three St. Louis pitchers. THE AMERICAN LEAGUE PENNANT RACE Clubs W. L. Pct. G.B. T.P. Cleveland .95 56 .629 ... 3 Boston ....94 58 .618 11> 2 New York .94 58 .618 112 2 ELMER SWANSON . . . now running frosh 1 I -1 MAN HATTAN SHIRTS in ALL Your Favorite Collar Styles at TicE' s EN'S HOP 1107 South University (Around the corner from Ulrich's) Mich* Oian Set Grid aide Saturday when the Webfeet Oregon take the field against theI Wolverines, they'll be expecting a team that squeaked by Michigar State by a narrow six-point mar- gin. They'll be mistaken. * * * THE LINE THAT seemed to melt against a driving State offense will be backed by veteran Wolverine Dick Kempthorn. Joe Soboleski will be back at left tackle, and Teninga and Ortmann will both work out of the left half- back position. The webfeet will be counting primarily on the passing of Norm Van Brooklin. Though he com- pleted 76 out of 198 tries last year, he'll now be passing into a dan- ger area of Michigan defense. Teninga and Elliott have both shown up superbly on pass de- fense. GENE DEICOTTE was in the hospital today with his knee still bothering him, and Pete Den- drinos was on the sidelines also. But Kempthorn and Soboleski and Ghindia would all be back in playing condition fq' the game. Kempthorn was working out of an offensive backfield with Tenin- ga at left half; Peterson was work- ing combined Ortmann. Rifenburg was looking as good as ever at end, and Kocesski was gathering the pigskin in from both Ortmann and Teninga. DANNY DWORSKY, 210 pound center, looked very good in the State game and seemed to be do- ing fine at practice. He, Ralph Kohl and Al Wistert, 220 pound tackles, will be the only Michigan men over 300 facing the Oregon line that averages 209 pounds, 13 over the Wolverine line average. ternoon, although a Cleveland win over Detroit tomorrow would as- sure them of no worse than a tie. IDLE TOMORROW while the Indians open their final three' game set with the Tigers, the Red Sox close out their season Sat- urday and Sunday in a two game' struggle with the New York Yan- kees. If they can win both from the Yanks, Cleveland must drop two of three to force a Monday' afternoon tie playoff. The New York Yankees re- tained their slim stake in the American League flag race by outscrambling Connie's Mack's Athletics 9 to 7 in a rain-swept game at Shibe Park today. When Vic Raschi, third Yankee pitcher in the ninth inning, stifled the last two Athletic batters with the bases loaded, it meant that the World Champions still had an out- side chance of winning the pennant they captured last year by a dozen games. The figures tonight showed that Bucky Harris' club could sneak in by beating the Boston Red Sox in both their closing games in the hub city Saturday and Sunday- providing the front-running Cleve- land Indians drop their final three Doctor Bares Use of Drugs LONDON - (/) --A prominent London doctor said today that some continental European ath- letes during the summer Olympic Games were stimulated by drugs, much in the manner of race horses. Dr. Christopher Woodard, direc- tor of the Athletics' Clinic at Lon- don't Middlesex Hospital, exon- erated all British and -American athletes. When he was asked what spe- cific events he referred to, Dr. Woodard replied "to sports in gen- eral and cycling in particular." The 34-year-old physician, an official medical adviser to the British Olympic team, said "I'm sick of this dirty business. It's time it came out." Campus shots by Lmanian -Ensian. The skimpy crowd of 2,622 cash customers raised Detroit's best home attendance total in history to 1,743,035 for 77 games, considered exceptional for the Tigers' second division standing. Bob Dillinger, the Browns' fine hitting third sacker, got three of his team's seven safeties off Gray, raising his hit total for the season over the 200 mark to 202. Everybody in the Tiger lineup except George Vico hit safely at least once as three Brownie hurl- ers paraded to the hill. AT ST. LOUIS this afternoon the Cardinals continued to win games that only fatten their final percentage rating as they beat Pittsburgh in the first half of an afternoon - night double - header, 6-1. At Wrigley Field the Chicago Cubs brought their home schedule to a close today by defeating the Cincinnati Reds, 1 to. 0, in a pitching battle between Cliff Chambers and Ken Raffensberger. 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Junior Varsity Players Vie forStarting Berths Competition is tough in this in early drills working at post-war era for a berth on any Jim Bremer, the pride football team and Michigan's Jay- ville, Illinois, and John vee squad is no exception. West Palm Beach, Forida Coach Don Robinson listed at are the outstanding cand least two men who were outstand- the right half slot. ing for almost every position. Norm Jackson, who d All of these men have been out fullback for the jayvees for practice since early in Sep- son, is aagin the leading tember, the men who reported der for that position. after school began being veri- John Anderson, Rosto tably left in the dust. dourjian, and Bob Twin The competition seems strong- shown the most promise est for the quarterback position. drills for working at'th Irv Small, who directed the "B' On the line Carl K team attack last season, is back holding his own at cent and seeking to retain his starting Gomberg, Chuck Cerec berth. Powers, and Mario Marc Hal Raymond, well-known in the strongest bidders fort Wolverine athletic circles,. as positions on tbissye catcher on the diamond squad, has iis _nisyear turned his signal calling abilities to the gridiron this fall. Close onDS'hi e sW Yna d his heels is Walt Young, a Toledo, -'"""' Ohio lad. * * * COLUMBUS, O - t AT LEFT HALF Jim Moorish, Wesley Fesler let his O another numeral winner from the University football teami '47 squad, is the leading con- out a scrimmage today in tender for the tailback slot. Russ tion for the SouthernC Osterman has also performed well game Saturday. 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