IN- XALXA j IVA HenrichIs Circuit Clout Trips Bums in Sehies pene: * * * Wolverines Polish Aerial Tactics for Army Game Ninth Inning H ome Run Gives Yanks 1-0_Victory Reynolds Turns in Two Hit Performance World Series anxieties swept through the campus yesterday but failed to affect the atmosphere surrounding the Ferry Field prac- tice fields where the Wolverine football squad moved one step closer to their Saturday date with Army's Cadets. Michigan coaches deviated from the usual Wednesday afternoon scrimmage routine, concentrating instead on aerial tactics, both of- fensive and defensive. OBSERVERS FELT that the Wolverine strategy board, in view of last weekend's strenuous Cali- fornia efforts, could not afford to play the game before Saturday k rolls around, especially on such a balmy afternoon as yesterday. 1. The first order of the day was a brush-up on defense against Army's T formation passing at- tack. Some attention. was also given running plays which the Black Knights of the Hudson may employ in trying to snap the Michigan gridiron victory string. After polishing his defensive air, armor, Coach Ben Oosterbaan! IM Scores Delta Upsilon 20, Tau Delta Phi 0. Beta Theta Pi 19, Alpha Sigma Phi0. Chi Psi 20, Acacia 0. Alpha Tau Omega 6, Phi Kappa Sigma 0. Sigma Chi 7, Sigma Alpha Ep- silon 6. Sigma Alpha Mu 22, Delta Chi 0. Kappa Sigma 34, Sigma Pi 0. Sigma Phi Epsilon 7, Theta Delta Chi 0. Delta Sigma Phi 33, Phi Kappa Tau 0. Psi Upsilon 26, Alpha Sigma Phi 0. checked the ammunition he'll fire' at the Cadets via the airways. Chuck Ortmann and Walt Ten- inga opened up a varied barrage of passes in an hour-long throw- ing drill with satisfactory results. * * * PROBABLY the main objective of the exercise was to cure the pass-juggling disease which gripped Michigan ends in the Stanford fray. Captain Al Wistert was again dressed but did not participate in the workouts beyond lending his support vocally. In a short conversation with Oosterbaan, Wistert, speaking of his pulled ligament, reassured his coach with. the report that Trainer Jim Hunt had predicted he'd be good as new on Friday. "That's good enough for me," added Al. The remainder of the squad con- tinued in top shape and should be ready for peak performance on Saturday. Michigan will be seek- ing to reinforce its rating as the nation's finest college eleven. FroshTeam Shows Good Passing Form Accurate passing, offset in part by weak line blocking and spotty running, marked the halfway point in the second week of frosh football., In a dummy blocking practice earlier in the afternoon, Weber's linemen hit viciously and opened big gaps for the runners, but it was a different story when the red-shirted defenders took over. ON SEVERAL plays the defen- sive guards rushed into the back- field to hurry passers and knock down interference after they had sidestepped the men assigned to block them. And when the linemen did open a gap, the ends missed the linebackers or the runner failed to find the hole. The tackling was good with the defenders hitting low and stop- ping the backs dead. ' The passing however was ef- fective. Although badly rushed, passers faded and put the ball right on the target for what would have been long gains had not play been halted at that point. Weber alternated half backs fre- quently in an attempt to find a successful backfield combination. Harry Stuldreher, a stocky quar- terback from Madison, Wisconsin, carried the brunt of the work at that position. To Better r iewcombhJ ON THE PULPIT - "Preacher" Roe, attempting to even the se- ries standings, will take the mound for the Dodgers today. Bum's Rush? BROOKLYN AB Reese, ss .......4 Jorgensen, 3b . . .3 Snider, of .......4 Robinson, 2b ... .4 Hermanski, If ...3 Furillo, rf ...... Hodges, lb .....2 Campanella, c ...2 Newcombe, p .. .3 R. 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 H. 1 1 0 0 0' 0 Q Q 0 TOTALS ....28 0 2 o. 2 0 3 4 0 0 4 11 0 24 o. 1 9 9 1 0 2 4 1 0 A. 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 A. 2 0 O 3 2 1 NEW YORK Rizzuto, ss .... Henrich, lb Berra, c..... . DiMaggio, of .. Lindell, if .... Johnson, 3b .. Mapes, rf ..... Coleman, 2b.. Reynolds, p TOTALS ... AB ...4 --4 ... 3 . 3 ..3 . 3 ..3 . 3 ...3 R. 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H. 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Tommy Henrich is strictly poison to the Brooklyn Dodgers. Henrich, who homered in the ninth inning yesterday to give the New York Yankees a 1-0 victory over the Dodgers in the first game of the 1949 World Series, always has been a pain to the Dodgers. * * * EXACTLY eight years ago yes- terday, Oct. 5, 1941, Henrich struck out in the ninth inning at Brooklyn for what appearedto be the f inal out of the game but catcher Mickey Owen dropped the ball and Henrich reached first safely. The Yanks promptly teed off and scored four runs to win. The next day the Yanks beat the Dodgers, 3-1, to take the series, four games to one. One of the Yank runs was a home run by Henrich. A home run by Henrich helped the Yanks win the second game of the 1947 series against the Dodgers. Tommy led off the fifth inning with a homer to give the Yanks a 4-2 lead. The Yanks went on to win, 10-3. THE GAME was only the sec- ond in World Series history won by the score of 1 to 0 on a home run. By coincidence, Manager Casey Stengel of the Yanks clouted the other bell-ringer to win a tight one for the New York Giants over the Yankees in the 1923 play-off. Witnesses of the two titanic socks said they landed at just about the same point in the stadium. Allie Reynolds, ace Yankee control pitcher, turned in a two hit mound performance to lead his mates to victory in the series opener. It was the ninth 1-0 shutout in series history. This was a tough one for New- combe to lose. The 235-pound, 25-' year-old rookie, who won 17 games after reporting to Brook- lyn late in May, had blinding speed and a sharp curve that tied the Yanks in. knots up to the time Henrich took things in hand. OF THE four hits off Newcombe which preceded the big one, two were by Reynolds himself. In the third inning the pitcher lofted a lazy fly to left which fellfor a double because Gene Hermanskii .29 1 5 27 8 in TightPitchingDuel had posted himself far over toward centerfield in the belief that Reynolds couldn't pull the ball to left. Reynolds also punched a single between third and short to open the sixth, but for the second time his mates were to- tally incapable of advancing him. Johnny Lindell and Coleman contributed the two other Yank hits. Johnny thumped a change of pace pitch cleanly into left for a single with one down in the se- ond inning, and died there as Billy Johnson and Cliff Mapes swung futilely at third strikes. WHEN COLEMAN pushed a double down the right field line with one out in the eighth, the Dodgers gathered around New- combe and asked him how he felt. The huge freshman wiped his brow in serious concentration, and replied by claiming Reynolds as his 11th strikeout victim and forcing little Phil Rizzuto to loft to center. And that was all that had happened this hazy afternoon until Henrich, one of the truly fine players of the present era, laced into Don's third throw in the ninth. Newcombe insisted his big mistake was a curve but, if so, it was a very fast curve. Manager Burt Shotton be- moaned the fate which caused Newcombe to come in with a fairly low one, just to Henrich's liking, instead of sticking it up around his neck. IF THAT one pitch had been high instead of low we'd still be out there yet," he moaned. Henrich's wallop finally bore out the experts' predictions that the Yanks would tee off on Brooklyn's young fast ballers, but it was a long time coming. The way Reynolds manhandled the Dodger lineup made it simple for Stengel to name Vic Raschi, another righthanded contro pitcher, as his starter in tomor- row's second game. FOR THE National Leaguers it will be their veteran lefthander, the skinny Elwin (Preacher) Roe, who won 15 during the season and turned in several telling victories in crucial series down the stretch. It was widely felt prior to the start of the play-off that Roe would give the Yanks more trou- ble than Newcombe, but that seems' unlikely at this point. Three Yankees - Johnson, Mapes, and Coleman - each struck out twice in succession against Newcombe's shots. In three tries, the convalescent DiMaggio whiffed once and popped out to second base twice. Though they had several oppor- tunities to run in the early inn- ings, the Dodger speed boys took no liberties with Berra's throw- ing arm until Reese sped to sec- ond in the eighth. Yogi's peg was so high that Coleman had to leap to pull it down. Brooklyn ......000 000 000-0 New York .....000 000 001-1 E--Coleman. RBI--Henrich. 2B-Jorgensen, Reynolds, Cole- man. HR-Henrich. SB--Reese. S - Hodges. DP - Reynolds, Coleman and Henrich. Earned Runs - Brooklyn 0; New York 1. Left-Brooklyn 6; New York 4. BB-Off Reynolds 4 (Hermanski, Furillo, Cam- panella, Jorgensen). SO-By Reynolds 9 (Snider 3, New- combe 2, Hermanski, Hodges, Campanella, Jorgensen; New- combe 11 (DiMaggio, Johnson 2, Coleman 2, Mapes 3, Berra, Lindell, Reynolds. Winner - Reynolds. Loser - Newcombe. PERFECT TIMING - Tommy Henrich blasted a ninth inning home run to give the New York Yankees a 1-0 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers yesterday in the series opener. Head Injuries Take Italian Boxer's Life BUFFALO, N.Y.-(P)--The prize ring career of Enrico Bertola end- ed in tragedy yesterday. The 27-year-old Italian boxer died of a head injury suffered in a bout last night with Lee Oma. Death came at 1:20 p.m. It was the world's eighth boxing death on record this year. District Attorney Gordon Steel ordered an immediate investiga- tion and told police to produce all ring officials, handlers of the fighters and officials of the spon- soring organization, the Fairview Athletic Club. "I have ordered Oma detained and held here until the matter is resolved," said Steel. It was understood, however, that Oma would be permitted to re- main in his hotel. Oma's home town is Detroit, but he now is fighting out of Newark, N.J. He could not be reached for comment. Steel said he also had ordered an autopsy to determine the exact cause of death. Bertola, who took the Italian Heavyweight Championship only two years ago, suffered quite a beating about the head in dropping the 10-round decision to Oma, but walked from the ring under his own power. Neither fighter was badly cut in the face. Fifteen minutes later Bertola complained to his handlers of feel- ing sick to his stomach. A few moments later he lapsed into a state of unconsciousness from which he never recovered. Dr. Louis Hertz examined Ber- tola on the spot and diagnosed the attack as a cerebral concussion and possible cerebral hemorrhage. The fighter was rushed to Emer- gency Hospital. He was on the op- erating table nearly five hours as doctors worked to relieve the pres- sure of a blood clot on the brain. Reports from the hospital, this morning grew progressively worse. Shortly after 11 a.m. he was re- ported near death. By noon, hos- pital officials described his con- dition as "very low." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4.. Continued from Page 2 Chinese Students Club, Chi Psi, Delta Sigma Delta, Delta Sigma Pi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Kappa Nu, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Alpha Kappa. Phi Chi, Phi Delta Phi, Phi M c i a ., Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Rho Sigma, Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Pi Lambda Phi, Psi Omega, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Chi, Sig- ma Nu, Theta Chi, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Xi, Triangle, Trigon, Young Progressives, Zeta Beta Tau, Zeta Psi. Sun., Oct. 9. Zeta Beta Tau. Men's Glee Club: First meet- ing, Thurs., Oct. 6, 7:15 p.m., Rm. Save Time and Money On Washdays at the Longer leisure Automatic washing machines Useful time added to wash day No waiting, if call for appointments Dryers available Relax while your washing is done Only 25c a load Makes clothes cleaner than ever Air conditioned Takes only one half hour 3G, Union. The following men have been accepted for member- ship during the year 1949-50: First Tenors Dale R. Dunnihoo, M. Harold Patterson, Sam Houghtaling, John C. Bay, Glenn Stuart, Dave Williams, Jack Hachigian, Andrew Pringle, Robert W. Haddock, Philip Steding, C. Wayne Wright. Second Tenors Wood M. Geist, E. Roy Duff, Jack K. Ehlers, Edward M. Purdo, Thomas W. Williams, Stanford Hartshorn, Marshall Franke, Ger- ald Van Syoc, Pat Paterson, Ru- dolph Rust, Jr., Alan Newman, Robert M. Benson, Dave Ruetenik, David M. Calahan, Bob Stauffer, Lawrence E. Derr, Russell J. Van Rynr, Roger E. DeMeritt. Baritones Foxworth, Donald, George F. Qua, 'Tom Sparrow, George M. Muelhauser, Pres Holmes, John Van Eenenaam, Jim Shortt, Rob- ert E. Morgan, Roy B. Wilson, Jr., Demar Helzer, Greider, K. R., McClew, Robert W., Robert C. Mulford, Richard C. Frank, Don- ald C. Smith, Robert A. Elson, Charles W. Scurlock, Arthur Snook. Basses William White, Robert Woz- nicki, Dale W. Wright, John Os- mundsen, Alvin R. Garchow, Don- ald D. MacMullan, Andrew Karoly, David Pease, Leonard Swanson, Merle A. Nelson, William B. Red- mon, William L. Kemp, Jr., D. Donald Hoexter, Dick A. Enten- mann, Donald Cleveland, Ara Ber- verian, Donald Ross. Lectures Michigan Memorial -- Phoenix Project Lecture: "Contributions of Isotopic Studies to the Study of Dynamic Metabolism." Dr. Har- din B. Jones, Donner Laboratory, University of California. 4:15 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 6, Rackham Amphi- theater. Academic Notices The Seminar in Applied Mathe- matics meets Thurs., Oct. 6, 4:15 p.m., Rm. 247 W. Eng. Bldg. Dr. W. M. Kincaid continues his talk on "Problems in Visual Percep- tion" All interested are invited to attend. (Continued on Page 4) I I Ernie Kuohn's New Location! 217 EAST LIBERTY BETTER MEN'S WEAR Conservatively Priced ERNIE KUOHN'S 217 East Liberty "0 aaaaaraaaaaaaaaaaaaaruR* i " a ! .3iE..fUu u aauuarauamaaa..U ARR OW'S r "a :: ::::y}3:Been out a.Robbing Rainbows i .:_ ~FOR YOU! a -U a i Ye-you can s chooseo y oa new lin of soldLcolorshirts lihteeiuadwdeer todesy anr"Aidespreadn "Atton-Do." a R ..Y .';. 9:.." NINN N .;....,3 ®a MeRobbingnt Roinbowns a Yee-nowr yrouceanerchoose a. fo ro 5 iffnts ncAolo s in:our:;: * "U!$ -0a e ua o -l p iI STUDENT SALESMAN WANTED Selling "Michigan Football Review" at Army Game i it I I 11