THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAC-!. 'hils Again Ier in Clutch As Yankees Whin, 3-2 * * * N * * * 7 oleman Proves Punch 'orRampagingN.Y. Gridmen Favored Over Green Coleman's Single Wains Game; Ford Hurls Today * * 4 *YORK-(A)-The slug- Oero of this run-starved *a handsome, slender, cur- i4 boy with a fetching grin seaon's batting average of 37 . t Gerry Coleman, a defen- iwark at second base but r ounted a Yankee slugger de Joe DiMaggio, John r Yogi Berra. 'OUGIT the team was go- 'wn," he said today after th-inning single had broken *. * * batted in the first run and the all- important third one. The pitch that he hit to do the damage in the ninth, he said, "was a high curve on the inside." * * * "FIRST Russ Meyer threw me a slider for a strike. Then he threw me a high curve for a ball, so I decided I better start swinging." And he did-on the next pitch. The big crowd in Yankee Stad- ium went wild, and even the Yankee players were laughing and jubilant as they streaked up the runway from their dugout into their luxurious dressing room. After the Yankee team was lock- ed securely in its dressing room for the seclusion which Commis- sioner A. B. Chandler promised immediately after each game, you could hear shouts coming out: "Gerry Coleman wins - Gerry Coleman wins." THE YANKEES are excited now. They were apathetic after the first victory, interested after their sec- ond, and now they are all pepped up. "It really feels wonderful," said Coleman. "It looks like we really ought to win the Series." That seemed at the moment to be putting it mildly, Joe DiMaggio, whose home run won yesterday's game, leaned over the group clustered around Cole- man. "I wanna hear what this junk sounds like," he said, and every- one laughed. ** * * "HOW DOES IT feel to be a big slugger?" someone asked Coleman. "Oh, shucks," he said, "We haven't scored very many runs. I drove in four in the series last year but I wasn't exactly what you'd call a big slugger." Ed Lopat, the crafty lefthanded pitcher who pitched the first eight innings, said he "felt pretty good, -but I made the wrong pitch at the right time - and what the hell." He referred to the single that Mike Goliat got in the seventh to put the Phillies ahead 2-1. Tom Ferrick, a big sandy haired fellow who came in to relieve Lo- pat and got credit for the victory, took plenty of back-pounding, too. His is a rags-to-riches story. He was traded to the Yankees by the St. Louis Browns, and went from the second division to a prominent role in the World Series efforts of the champions. As for Manager Casey Stengel of the Yankees, he managed al- most to smile but he was far from exultant. (Continued from Page 1) of Putich being shifted to the left half slot in place of Don Peterson. IF THAT is done, Pete Palmer will take over the quarterback du- ties. Otherwise Peterson will team up with Leo Koceski at right half and the driving Don Dufek at full. There is expected to be little change in Michigan's line. Ozzie Clark and Harry Allis get the de- fensive end chores, with Frank Picard and Lowell Perry the of- fensive duties. John Hess, Captain Al Wahl, Roger Zatkoff, and Tom Johnson will share the tackle assignments and Tom Kelsey, Pete Kinyon, Dick McWilliams, and Al Jack- son will alternate at guard. John Padjen aiad Tony Momsen will handle the offensive and defensive center positions respectively. * * * OOSTERBAAN will also call on Frank Howell, a sophomore, for duty at right half offensively and also for protection against Clay- njun Records Dartmouth's 1949 football team as well as several of its individual members set a host of new team records. I ton's passes. Howell was injured slightly in Saturday's game, but is expected to be ready for today's action. Dartmouth's forward wall will be led by their captain and cen- ter Paul Stanley. Stanley is a 185 pounder who plays both offense and defense and is a veteran of two years experience. Flanking him will be Dick Price and Joe Morelli at guard, Ted Eb- erle and Charles Bailey at tackle, and John McDonald and Vincent Marriott at the ends. AGAINST Holy Cross last week Dartmouth put on a tremendous second period spurt to tie the Cru- saders. After Holy Cross had piled up 245 yards in the first half, the Indians roared back after the in- termission to finally gain a sta- tisical edge. Roberts did a large share of the ground gaining, piling up 100 yards in 22 rushes. In all the Indians rolled up 228 yards by the overland route to go with Clayton's 105 markers through the air. Dartmouth has seen little action against Western Conference com- petition. They whipped Chicago 33-7 in 1925 and lost to the same school, 39-0 in 1933. The only other contest resulted in a 27-6 shel- lacking by Northwestern in 1927. * **U ,THE LINEUPS TONY MOMSEN * * * right cross /4e * S S One More? WURBA CHURCH ..lat whiz hope . ir4 gme -of the series, i6tThgk I'd be that in- ital i iR:R yictory." that's the way he talks, g all the time. And look- we as if he belonged on a team-.than on the Tan-, as.now batted in three of runs the Yankees have i three games. He brought winning and only run in itgame with a long fly to Id. He scored the first run second game, and today he ag Consoles flies' Hlamner )aggio and Gran Hamner the tunnel leading to the %.,after the game. Hamner, eling low over his error cabled the Yanks to score itg tun in the eighth, was g his head in grief. Joe put Ma around the youngster's s And tried to sooth his l. It terrible for the kid," Joe Eo looked so forlorn." ROG ZATKOFF * * * left hook Big Ten Opens Season; 111ini Face Badgers Intersectional battles and the opening of the Big Ten's 1950 con- ference season highlight today's football encounters throughout the nation. In big games today, Pennsyl- vania will face the California Gol- den, Bears, while a once-beaten Maryland outfit will attempt to live up to its pre-season notices, meeting the Spartans of Michi- gan State. * * * NOTRE DAME, unbeaten in its last 39 outings, will face a deter- mined Purdue team, though the Irish should win handily. Stan- ford, considered a West Coast power this year, meets Oregon State. Army plays a so-so Penn State team which ripped Georgetown, 34-14, last week, but the Cadets are big favorites. Oklahoma, with a winning streak of 22 games meets a good Texas A. & M. team, and S.M.U.'s Mustangs face Missouri. In another top game in the far West, a dark-horse Washington eleven, fresh from an easy 28-13 triumph over Minnesota, will take the field against U.C.L.A. in a game which may go either way. TURNING TO the Big Ten, two conference games are scheduled. The Wisconsin Badgerswill face Illinois at Champaign. The Illini, with first-string quarterback Don Engels out of action for the year with a broken hip, will rely on a strong running game. Johnny Karras, Ronnie Clark, Sam Piazza, and Dick Raklo- vitz will bear the brunt of the ball-carrying for Illinois, while the Badgers will rely on the ac- curate right arm of Bob Petrus- ka to carry them to victory. Iowa plays Indiana in the other Western Conference game. The Hawkeyes showed unusual power last week as they rolled over Sou- thern California, and the Hoosiers will be hard-pressed to stop the drives of Jerry Faske and Bill Reichardt. * * * NON-CONFERENCE games pit Michigan against Dartmouth, Pittsburgh against Ohio State, Northwestern and Navy, and Ne- braska faces its second Big Ten opponent in a row-Minnesota. Lesser games feature Alabama and Vanderbilt, Arkansas and T.C.U., Columbia and Harvard, Cornell and Syracuse, and Georgia against North Carolina. Waitkus lb Ashburn cf Jones 3b Ennis rf Sisler If Mayo If Hamner ss Seminick c Goliat 2b c-Caballero Bloodworth 2b Heintzelman p Konstanty p b-Whitman Meyer p TOTALS AB 5 4 3 4 4 0 4 2 3 0 0 2 0 1 0 32 R 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 H 1 1 1 1 1 0. 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 8 0 1 3 2 1 2 5 4 04 a1 0 0 0 0 a26 A 0 0 2 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 8 Quarterback Johnny Clayton completed 56% of his passes, for a total of 813 yards, both new marks. End Tom Rowe, gone from this year's team, caught 36 passes for 478 yards, also new team records. - Bill Roberts, star Indian run- ning back this season averaged 5.5 yards per try, gaining 700 }ards in 125 carries. Roberts, from Dubuque, Iowa, Clayton, and Rowe paced the Ivy League in their respective departments. PHILADELPHIA DARTMOUTH a Marriott ..... LE Eberle....... LT Price ........ LG Staley ....... . C Morelli ...... RG Bailey .......RT McDonald ... RE Clayton......QB Curtis ....... LH Reich ....... RH Roberts ...... FB MICHIGAN .........Clark ........ Hess ...... Kinyon ...... Padjen .......Kelsey ........ Wahl ........ Allis ........Putich ..... Peterson ..... Koceski ....... Dufek By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK-(W)-The New York Yankees defeated the Phila- delphia Phillies for the third straight time yesterday, 3 to 2, and1 broke the hearts of the Whiz Kids in the process. - The American League cham- pions shoved across the tying runr in the eighth on a glaring error by Granny Hamner, Phil short- stop, and scored the winning run after two were out in the ninth on a hit into centerfield by Gerry; Coleman with two on base. THIS WAS the seventh straight, one-run defeat suffered by the; Phillies in World Series play dat- ing back to 1915, and it probably was the toughest of the lot to lose. It will take stout hearts for Eddie Sawyer's youngsters even to show up for the fourth game in the Sta- dium tomorrow. For the third time since the ,series opened in Philadelphia, the National Leaguers received brilliant pitching. They outhit the Bombers by 10 to 7, and they went into the final two innings nursing an apparently safe 2-1 lead as their 34-year-old south- paw, Ken Heintzelman, mowed down the fearsome Yanks like winter wheat. But then, even as "the great crowd of 64,505 was cheering them on to victory in hopes of extend- ing the play-off to at least five games, both Heintzelman and his support succumbed to the pres- sure. It was a doleful climax to what had been a fine, tight base- ball game. Heintzelman had yielded only four hits and had retired the first two Yanks in the last of the eighth when it began to happen. The vet- eran southpaw suddenly lost his control completely and walked Coleman, Larry Berra, and Joe DiMaggio in succession to load the bases, with the tying run on third. * *A * JIM KONSTANTY, who lost the first game to the Yanks, came in from the bullpen to make his 75th relief appearance of the year. He faced Bobby Brown, pinch-hitting for Hank Bauer. After fouling off a pair, Brown sent a simple roller down to Hanmner, who has been called by some as fine a shortstop as there is in the game today. The Whiz Kid picked up the ball, then dropped it, and by the time he had recovered the pellet it was too late to make a force play at second and Coleman had crossed the plate. Johnny Mize then popped foul back of third to end the inning. Came the last of the ninth, and Russ Meyer, the third Phillies' pitcher, likewise retired the first two Yanks, fanning Cliff Mapes for the second out. It looked like another extra-inning tussle when Gene Woodling, who had hit for the Yankee pitcher, Eddie Lopat; came to bat. He rapped one down to Jimmy Bloodworth, who had taken ov second base for the Phils to star the inning. The veteran bobble the ball a second and got off hurried, wide throw as Woodlin sped across the bag. The offiels scorers ruled it a hit, not bein certain that a perfect play woul have nipped the Yank. THEN CAME little Phil Rizzutd and he slammed one just totU right of second which Bloodwort divednat and knocked down br couldn't hold. Woodling slid i4 safely as the ball rolled arour * * .* a-Two out when winning run scored b-Hit into fielder's choice for Konstanty in 9th c-Ran for Goliat in 9th FUTURE GREATS? Freshman Squad Shows Much Defensive Promise NEW YORK Rizzuto ss Coleman 2b Berra e DiMaggio cf Bauer If d-Brown e-Jensen Ferrick p Mize lb Collins lb Johnson 3b Mapes rf Lopat p Woodling If TOTALS AB 3 4 2 3 3 1 0 0 4 0 4 4 2 2 32 R 1 1 0 41 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 H 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 I O 1 3 6 1 1 0 0 0 9 1 1 3 1 0 27 A 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 3 0 4 0 13, WHITEY FORD * * In Phils Future the bag. That brought up t' youthful Coleman, batting hero the series, asnd he slammed a s gle into left-center field to wl the game. Whitey Ford, the Yankees' 23 year-old rookie southpaw sens! iton will attempt to wrap up tl series tomorrow. The youngst won nine games and lost only o, after joining the Yanks from thc Kansas City farm early in Jul He possesses remarkable conti and unusual poise for a player .; young. For the Phillies it was to bec d ther Bob Miller (11-6) or .Bub' Church (8-6) both freshmi ' righthanders. By this time, ,SaN. yer probably is wondering wh,. sort of pitching was required t win a game from the Bombers: It; a fair question, at that. ---;~ 1 We carry a full line of OSHER DELICATESSEN SALAMI CORNED BEEF PASTRAMER WEINERS SMOKED FISH By LARRY SPERLING v Freshman football moved into full swing this week as Coach! Wally Weber put his boys through offensive and defensive drills. Though it is hard to drawi any conclusions at this early date most observers agree that this year's' squad will be strong defensively but not up to par on the offense. * * * THIS WEAKNESS on the of- fense is particularly significant in view of the fact that a large chunk of the varsity's offensive backfield is graduating after this season. New backfield material will be necessary to help fill the gap which will be made by the loss of Ort- mann, Dufek and Koceski. The importance to the varsity of the men moving up from the freshman squad each year can be readily seen by a glance at the key part which some of the stars from last season's fresh- man team are playing in the Wolverines' 1950 array.. Rog Zatkoff fresh from the frosh ranks has taken over the post of line backer which was left vacant when Dick Kempthorn graduated. Despite the fact that it was his first game against big time competition Zatkoff gave a very good account of himself. PROMINENT in the defensive backfield also is Frank Howell. He is an excellent example of how the freshman prospects are versed in all aspects of the Michigan system. Originally known as mainly an offensive threat, Howell was well prepared to step into a key position in the Wolverines' pass defense which was considerably weakened by the loss of Wally Teninga and Charley Lentz. Last season's lack of good pass catching receivers was greatly al- leviated by Lowell Perry's moving up from the frosh squad. This glue fingered end is also playing a large part in the pass defending set-up. ,, * * ON THE LINE last year's freshmen team will be strongly represented by Dick Strozewski. Though he did not see action last week because of an injury his presence is expected to be felt by Michigan's opposition for the re- mainder of the season. Another ex-freshman star may be vaulted into prominence in today's game if Charley Ort- mann's injury keeps him ou't of the starting line-up. He is Dave Hill who has been alternating with Don Peterson at Ortmann's tailback slot during this week's practices. Other sophomores who are do- ing well on the varsity are quarter- back Ted Topor, lineman Bob Timm, and Bill Billings, a punting specialist. * WALLY WEBER, who as coach of the Freshman team handled all of the aforementioned men, ex- pressed the opinion that they will develop into very valuable men in the Michigan football picture. "Most of these men have the potential," asserted Coach Weber. "All they need now is experience which can only be acquired by playing against the top grade competition which Michigan faces." "It's too bad, he added, "that some of these fellows had to be called upon to playesuch an impor- tant role in their very first game. It would have been better if they could have been broken into the starting line-up .more slowly." d-Safe on error for Bauer in 8th e-Ran for Brown in 8th Philadelphia (N) 000 001 100-2 New York (A) 001000 011-3 E-Seminick, Hamner, RBI- Coleman 2, Sisler, Goliat. 2B- Ennis, Hamner. SB-Rizzuto. S- Seminick 2, Heintzelman, Jones. DP-Hamner and Wait- kus. Left-Philadelphia 8; New York 9. BB-Heintzelman 6 (Rizzuto 2, Berra 2, Coleman, DliMaggio) ; Ferrick 1- (Goliat). SO-Lopat 5 (Ashburn 3, Semi- nick, Jones); Meyer 1 (Mapes); Heintzelman 3 (Johnson 2, Lo- pat). HO-Lopat 9 in 8 innings; Heintzelman 4 in 7 2/3; Kon- stanty 0 in i; Meyer 3 in 2/3; Ferrick 1 in 1. Winner-Ferrick. Loser-Meyer. U-Dusty Boggess (NL) plate; Charlie Berry (AL) first base; Jocko Conlan (NL) second base; Bill McGowan i(AL) third base; Al Barlick (NL) 'left field foul line; Bill McKinley (AL) right field foul line. T-2:35. A-64,505. Receipts- $309,049.35. OPTICAL SERVICE CAMPUS OPTICIANS 222 Nickels Arcade Phone 2-91 16 The Undergraduate "M" CLUB will be selling souvenir Maize and Blue CUSHION SEATS At the game today selling for only $1.00 .Don't miss this chance to enjoy the game in comfort. U, I I. .r- 1 l FRESH DAILY BREAD; BAGELS, ROLLS l I the finest in MEATS..e.GROCERIES FRESH and FROZEN VEGETABLES ' carry a full line of PEPPERIDGE Bread and Rolls Open Sunday 10 A.M. - 1 P.M. Daily 8 - 6 FRATERNITY MARKET G R A D U A T E S s E N I O H S I. S0 S.uth University Phone 2-1791 11 i CORRECTO The ad appearing on last Wednesday for, the PARROT should have read e Wie! PICTURES! AVOID TROUBLE LUNCH & C LUNCH & C 6 DAYS A WEEK INNER 00 5 DAYS A WEEK )INNER .'oo This is a wise bird watching you. Hove you moved? Be smart. Avoid complications. Register your change of ad- dress at the Ann Arbor Bank. PICTURES! Make that Appointment NOW! For your convenience: Phone 2-32-41 11 I I