1949 THE MICHIGAN DAMIY PAGE. THREE BACK TO WORK: Gridders Emphas ize Fundamentals Pitchers Named for Rig Nine Opener With the second week of spring fQotball practice underway, the gridders are showing vast im- provement and are making rapid strides toward regaining the sharpness which won them the national championship last sea- ,on. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan has aeen concentrating on such fund- amentals as timing, individual as- signments and blocking. LINEMEN under Coaches Blott and J. T. White have receiving rugged "two on blocking practice. Jack been one" This type of work enables them to get the jump on and outcharge their opponents, something Wolverine lines have! been noted for in the last few seasons. Oosterbaan and backfield coach George Ceithaml have been running the backfield candidates through signal drills. DIVIDED into two groups, one group of backs ran through Iunning plays yesterdaydin which timing and ball handling were stressed, while the other concen- trated on forward passing. The improvement of the gridders was much in evidence on, pass plays. Before vacation few passers were hitting their targets, but yesterday long heaves were being consistently completed. It's still too early to say who will fill the first string vacancies at guard, tackle and quarter- back but so far several gridders at each position have shown they merit more than passing consid- eration. * * * Beel and John Gabel from the freshman team and Chuck Cer- ?cke and Jim Bremer of the jay- vees have stood out. Bill Bartlett, Bill Putich and Don Zanfagna have looked good at quarterback. Lettermen al Wahl and Jim At- chison have the inside track on the offensive tackle position va- 2ated by Joe Soboleski, but fresh- men Tom Johnson, Ralph Stribe and John McIntyre are exhibiting great promise. Louis Makes Detroit Debut As Promoter DETROIT - (A') - Three 10- round features will mark the De- troit debut April 27 at Olympia Stadium of Joe Louis' Interna- tional Boxing Club as fight pro- moter. Harry Mendel, operating as pub- licity manager for the IBC, in which the heavyweight champion is in partnership with James Nor- ris, Jr., and Arthur M. Wirtz, said that Lester Felton, undefeated De- troit welterweight, would meet Bobby Dykes of San Antonio, Texas, in one of the co-features. Art Aragon, Los Angeles light- weight, will appear in another, but Mendel said that original plans for him to meet Leroy Wil- lis of Detroit were abandoned when Willis was knocked out Monday night in Chicago by Lu- ther Rawlings. Luther Burgess, another De- troiter who holds the Michigan featherweight title, will appear in Wings Strive for First Win Against Leafs in Cup Finals After two straight defeats on home ice, the Detroit Red Wings are in Toronto where they will face the Maple Leafs tonight in the third game of the Stanley Cup finals. If they manage to take the Wings, the Canadians will be the only outfit to have won the cup three times consecutively since the formation of the National Hockey League, and they're odds- on favorites to pull the trick. The Wings are bucking precedent, since there are few cases of a team losing its first pair of games on home ice and then coming back to cop the championship. However, Detroit can turn the pages of history back just a few years to 1945. In the semi-finals against Boston, the Wings dropped two contests at home to the Bruins and it looked as though they'd never make the finals. But the Detroiters started to get hot in that first game on Boston ice, and, when the series had ended, the Wings were on top, four games to three. Wing Manager Tommy Ivan has dropped his experiments with the rookies in an attempt to find the scoring punch Detroit has lacked so far, and will stick with the veterans who put the team in first-place in regular season play. By HAROLD TANNER Bill Taft and Dick Smith will 'I }:the starting pitchers for the Mi-higan baseball squad when it npens defense of its share of the tern Conference title against Purwdue Friday and Saturday. coach Ray Fisher announced yes- terday afternoon. During the southern trip on which the Maize and Blue scored five victories: both hurlers turned in impressive performances with Smith, sophomore southpaw. gaining two victories. Taft was credited with another win and worked in the 1-1 deadlock against Virginia. CALIFORNIA, HERE I COME-Ed Buchanan (left) and Pete Barthell (center) will go with Wolverine gymnastics coach Newt Loken (right) to'the NCAA meet which is being held Saturday, April 16, in California. In the Conference gym meet, which was held here March 26, Buchanan took the trampoline title, while Barthell walked off with top honors in tumbling and the parallel bars. i i DiM aggio Goes Back to Hospital Again) AT GUARD Dick Ratcliffe, Joe the third 10-rounder. DAIY OFFICIAL BULLELTIN 1 " (Cpntinued from Page 2) Oureau of Appointments: Wed., April 13 -- The Carter Oil Co. will have a representative here to interview Ph.D. candidates in physics and geology, M.S. and Ph.D. candidates in chemical engi- fneeting, and M.S. and Ph.D. can- didates in chemistry, excluding organic chemists. Wed., April 13-The Bethlehem Steel Co. will have a representa- tive here to interview mechanical, vivil, naval, electrical, chemical, and metallurgical engineers. - Wed., April 13--The American Home Foods Co. will have a repre- sentative here to interview stu- dents for sales of nationally known brands: - Wed., April 13 and Thurs., April ,14-The General Electric Com- ?any will have a representative ere to interview men interested ART CINEMA LEAGUE Presents a ' t1 _,1 M7: V f*t N ;stmig in entering the accounting and fi- nancial management field. Com- pulsory meeting, Tues., April 12, 7:30 p.m., 130 Business Adminis- tration Bldg. for all those to be interviewed. Thurs., April 14, and Fri., April 15--The Hazeltine Electonics Co. will have a representative nhere to interview electrical engineers and some physics students for their re- search. Fri., April 15-The Wilson Co. will have a representative here to interview industrial - mechanical engineers, including a position in purchasing for an engineer. The Carnation Company are in- terested in students for their train- ing program. Students interested in the management of small plants in relatively small communities should contact the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Administration Bldg. The Fair, Department Store in Chicago, will have a representative here on Thurs., April 14, to inter- view men and women for their training program. For further information and ap- pointments concerning the above call Ext. 371, or stop in the office, 3528 Administration Bldg. Approved Social Events for the following week: April 15 Alpha Phi Omega, Pi Lambda Phi, Tau Delta Phi April 16 Alpha Chi Sigma, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Kappa Psi, Delta Sigma Delta, Delta Tau Delta, Graduate Student Council, Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Rho Sigma, Psi Upsilon, Sigma Phi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Theta Xi, Zeta Beta Tau, Zeta Psi April 17 Intercollegiate Zionist Federa- tion of America League, Phi Delta Phi, Zeta Beta Tau Lectures Lecture: First of two lectures on Family Living. "The Care and Feeding of Young Infants." Dr. Ernest H. Watson, Associate Pro- fessor of Pediatrics and Commu- nicable Diseases, Medical School, and Associate Professor of Child Health, School of Public Health. 8 (Continued on Page 4) By The Associated Press FORT WORTH-Joe DiMaggio, $100,000-a-year star of the New York Yankees, left for Baltimore by air yesterday to have his in- jired right heel treated at Johns Hopkins Hospital. He will be lost to the club for the start of the season next week. But he denied any though of re- tiring from baseball. * * * THE DRASTIC turn of events came after the great centerfielder was given a four-hour examina- tion by Dr. T. M. Girard, a Dallas specialist. Dr. Girard was recom- mended to the Yankees by Dr. George Bennett of Baltimore, the surgeon who operated on DiMag- gia's heel last November. "He will be there 10 days," Dr. Girard said, "taking X-rays and inoculations." The specialist described the heel trouble as a "hot condition," not necessarily a regrowth of the old bone spur, but an irritation which requires rest and a new method of treatment. DR. GIRARD said he thought the heel would cure in time and that DiMaggio would be able to re- turn to baseball, but he declined to predict how long it would take. Without DiMaggio's bat, the Yankees would be given slight chance to figure in the Ameri- can League race. He has hit only .216 in limited service this spring. Joe's latest woe began last Sat- urday at Beaumont, when he in- curred a thigh bruise in a slide to third base. Later, he developed a painful ache in the heel, but he played briefly at Greenville on Sunday and three more innings here yesterday before he consulted Dr. Girard. Yank in No-Hitter FORT WORTH, Tex.-(P)--Bob Porterfield, sophomore New York Yankee pitcher, pitched the Yanks to an eight inning no-hit no-run triumph over the Fort Worth Cats of the Texas League yesterday. The score was 10-0. The game was called at the end of eight innings to allow the Yanks to catch a train for Terre Haute, Ind., where they meet the local Three-Eye League team to- morrow. The no-hitter was the first in a spring exhibition game since March 30 last year when Murry Dickson, then with the St. Louis Cardinals, pitched the Red Birds to a 7-0 no-hit no-run triumph over the Yanks at St. Petersburg, Fla. Phils Blank Reds LOUISVILLE, Ky.-(AP)-Ken Heintzelman and Ken Trinkle allowed only three hits yester- day to give the Philadelphia Nationals a 4-0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. * * .* Biosox Win BALTIMORE, Md.-(,)-Right- hander Joe Dobson pitched all the way for the Boston Red Sox yes- terday as the American League sluggers defeated the Baltimore Orioles of the International League, 10-4. Browns Rally SHERMAN, Tex.-(P)-The St. Louis Browns put on a successful ninth - inning rally to nip the Sherman-Denison Twins 4-2 yes- terday. * *** Iowa Pounds Irish SOUTH BEND, Ind.-(P')-Dick Orth turned in a three-hit pitch- ing performance yesterday and his Iowa teammates pasted Notre Dame's baseball team with its third consecutive loss, 8-1. Shortstop John Sullivan and right fielder Don Espe collected three hits each to lead Iowa's 16- hit attack on Irish pitchers Jack Campbell and Bob nemes. Camp- bell was the losing hurler. * * * Zale Through? PHILADELPHIA - (P) - Leon Rains, chairman of the Pennsyl- vania Athletic Commission, said yesterday steps should be taken to stop Tony Zale from meeting champion Marcel Cerdan for the Middleweight Boxing Champion- ship. Rains said he would recommend such action to Abe Greene, Na- tional Boxing Association Com- missioner, because "it would be a tragic mistake to allow Zale to fight again and endanger his life." "When he was stopped by Rocky Graziano in Chicago two years ago and by Cerdan last fall, Zale took two of the worst beatings a top- notch fighter evter had to suffer," Rains said. "Any ordinary fighter would have been retired from the game without ado," he added, "but Zale. because of his long and honorable record in the ring, was entitled and allowed to make that decision for himself. DO YOU KNOW . . . that in 1912 when the entire Detroit Tiger Baseball team quit in protest of Ty Cobb's indefinite suspension, President Ban Johnson hired 9 new men in the morning, used them in the afternoon, and fired them in the evening when the Tiger squad reconsidered their ac- tion. WITH THE opening circuit contest of the season only two days off, Fisher is stillnbemoaning the lack of hitting on this year's nine. Yesterday's intrasquad game failed to produce any good hit- ting. Fisher observed that some of his younger pitchers were making several of the veterans look very poor at the plate. Several players are nursing ail- ments acquired during the eight game southern tour. Included in this list are Ted Kobrin, Bob Wolff, and Hal Morrill. All of the injured men are expected to be ready for starting action against Purdue Friddy at Lafay- ette. * * * FISHER had been particularly impressed 'with the work of Mor- rill, who has connected for three home runs and is currently hit- ting .333. The southpaw slugger has been playing first base, his nor- mal position, against lefthand- ers and has been cavorting in 02 Meeting of Phi Epsilon Kappa -short business meeting in Room 3N of the Union at 7:30 p.m. tonight. Attendance will be taken. -Tom Van Voorhis. LIFTS LARRYTO OLYMPIAN DELIGHTS WITH A CINEMATIC HOUR COME ON, LARRY! YOU HAVE TO BE PHOTOGRAP-HED. YOU'RE PICKED TO _ I'D GIVE MY CHIAROSCURO SMOKING AND STUDYING SO ESCORT DOLLY DARE, THE HOLLY- JACKET TO HAVE MY HARD HAVE LEFT ME WOOD HETAIRA, OUR CHOSEN , PICTURE SENT TO "PHIS PEDICULOUS.I HAVEN'T THE PLCAOIN(? . .. QUEN O SHI3 PPOTISUIGN LULU AND YOU SULK! VELLSITY TO OGLE THE QUEEN OF SH eBA eta \ : r R TGo WITH H D OR A PICTURE OF k~ - .55 .. (:: CGARETE ANGOVER. 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