IVEMBER 15, 1950' THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Northwestern Looks for Repeat of Last Year' s Upset Pancho Segura Reaches Top in Pro Tennis World By GEORGE FLINT When Francisco (Pancho) Se- gura came up to the United States from the tropic midlands of Ecua- sdorin 1941, his native land en- trusted him with almost as much of a public relations job as that of their ambassador. And so far along the tennis trail he's fulfilled the mission with more alacrity than the latter non- entity, who hasn't even gotten his country a slice of the Marshall Plan. The reason? FROM POOR beginnings and a childhood marred by an attack of polio, Segura has risen to the heights of professional tennis, to the point where he's the official number one among the play-for- pay boys, and this season is chal- lenging Big Jake Kramer for the factual title. His meteoric rise has, in a sense, put Ecuador on the map insofar as the United States is concerned. Which is precisely what his government wanted him to do. They sent him to the U.S. to go to college at the University of Mi- ami, and more important, to play tennis. Hewon the National Collegiate crown three times, in 1943, 1944, and 1945. HE ROSE TO near the top among the amateur players, and ranked in the same class with Kramer, Ted Scroeder, and Fran- kle Parker. He was seeded third in the nation in those three top collegiate years. i I Last spring he won the Na- tional Professional Champion- shi. beatinr Kramer in the snip, unsting rmE f*ittr u W semi-finals, 6-4, 8-10, 1-6, 6-4, 6-3 in the semi-finals, and win- ning from Frankie Kovacs in the finals by default. What makes Pancho run? That's the question most fans ask when the smiling little man from South America walks on the court to face the towering Kramer. For the Ecuadorian court artist is a spindly-legged, pigeon-toed, slightly built man, standing only five feet eight inches with his thickest socks on. THE FACT THAT he can with- stand Kramer's most blistering volleys, and come bouncing back for more, stems partially from his amazing speed-he's reputedly the quickest man in' the pro game- and his being a steady stroker with an unorthodox and baffling style. Pancho is one of the few rank- ing players now active who uses a two-handed style of play. Made popular by Australia's Jack Bromwich a decade, ago, the two-handed form enables a lit- tle guy like Segura to get the utmost power out of his spare frame. He picked up the style while still weak from the ravages of the polio which afflicted him when young. Story is that Segura was too weak to swing the racquet in a conventional manner, so he took to flailing it about like a latter- day Mel Ott, with surprisingly good results. PANCHO SEGURA .. two-handed terror MILLER'S DAILY FEATURE COMPLETE DINNER ...59c Mexican Beef and Spaghetti . . . Potato Salad or Vegetable Roll and Butter . . . Bevemge I D. MILLER'S CAFETERIA 211 South State Buckeyes Top AP Grid Poll; Cadets Third NEW YORK-(A')-In a surpris- ing shakeup, Ohio State yesterday moved in as the nation's No. 1 foot- ball team as Army, last week's leader, tumbled to third place be- hind Oklahoma. The fall of Army is the big news in the weekly Associated Press poll. The unbeaten Cadets, 51 to 0 win- ners over little New Mexico Satur- day, actually received the most first place votes, 72. But Ohio State and Oklahoma scored heavi- ly on second and third place votes to move up. The system gives 10 points for a first-place ballot, nine for second and so on. Wolverines' Bowl Hopes In Balance 'M' Eager To Avenge Startling_1949 Defeat By JIM PARKER Don't look now, but that team is here again. The same band of Northwestern Wildcats that derailed the Wolver- ines last year is here to try again- only this time under slightly dif- ferent circumstances. * * * LAST SEASON Northwestern's 21-20 upset of Michigan ruined the Wolverines' bid for their third un- disputed W e s t e r n Conference Championship. Michigan had to settle for a share of the crown with Ohio State. This year Michigan is practi- cally out of contention for the Big Ten title, but still is fan- ning a spark of hope for making a trip to sunny Southern Cali- fornia's Rose Bowl come New Years Day. A trip to the West Coast, how- ever, means taking the measure of both Northwestern and Ohio State, coupled with an OSU victory over Illinois this weekend. AND NOW THAT everyone is rating the Ohio State game as the final word on Michigan's bowl chances, the stage is set for the Wildcats to repeat in their role of spoilers in the Maize and Blue gridiron picture. Needless to say, Bennie Oos- terbaan remembers what hap- pened at Evanston last year. As if it wasn't enough that the Wildcats put the damper on Michigan's undisputed title vi- sion, the game also showed the Wolverines at their football worst. The outcome of that ragged con- test had a profound effect on Oos- terbaan. It left in him the painful sting of having to watch helpless- All 'M' Club members are re- quested to meet in the club- rooms tonight at 7:30. Sweat- ers should be worn for the 'En- sian picture. -Jeff Knight ly from the sidelines while his team took one on the chin from a defi- nitely inferior squad. * * * UNDER THE WATCHFUL eyes of the Michigan coaching staff, the Wolverines went through a spirited drill yesterday that made up in drive what it may have lacked in body contact. The injury department con- tinued to exhibit the most en- couraging signs to come from that spot this year. Leo K o c e s k i was running through plays from his wingback post in offensive drills, and Don Peterson was busy on pass defense and warmup sprints. Don Oldham worked out in the ground running attack although s t ill limping slightly. The only serious injury on the line still holds offensive tackle John Hess on the doubtful list. Exploding for two touchdowns in the second half, Michigan House shut out Prescott, 12-0, to capture the residence hall Intra- mural football crown. Miring passes with an extranef- fective running attack, the new champs, paced as usual by Howard Maturen, traveled 80 yards on seven plays and two first downs to mark up the first and winning score. * * THE PAYOFF WAS a 35-yard pass from Maturen to end Russ Kendall, who made a fine one- handed catch in the end zone. The West Quadders applied the clincher in much the same fashion. Prescott lost the ball on downs on its own 35. One run, two passes to Jim Hatton, and one penalty later, Michigan had a first down on Prescott's 8. Maturen then shot a pass to lion Fackler for the TD. Prescott's only scoring chance came immediately after half-time when a major penalty and a pass from Jack Price to Hy Levinstein gave the East Quad men a first down on Michigan's 15. BUT ANOTHER major penalty, this time against Prescott, nulli- fied a touchdown and put the los- ers into a hole from which they were forcer to kick after two fu- tile pass attempts. n- ALPHA CHI SIGMA TOPS PROS: Michigan, Delta Sigs, Mug wumps Rule I-M Football Prescott was able to play the victors to a standstill in the first half mainly on the strength of pass interceptions by Duane Pos- sanza and Ken Kellar, plus a tre- medous 80-yard punt by Levin- stein. Fraternity The passing and running of Mil- ton Heath gave Delta Sigma Phi the needed spark to snatch the so- cial fraternity IM grid title from Phi Sigma Delta 18-0. Heath, the main offensive wea- pon for Delta Sigma Phi this sea- son, passed for two touchdowns to Jack Hayes and Carl Raiss. The remaining six pointer was scored by Raiss on an intercepted pass. * * * IN THE INITIAL half the lone score came about on a pass from Heath to Raiss which covered 30 yards. Raiss' run back of an in- tercepted pass accounted for the second tally while Heath's 20 yard aerial to Hayes completed the scor- ing in the second half. * * * Independent By virtue of gaining the most yardage in four overtime plays the Mugwumps became the new Inde- pendent champions. BOTH TEAMS sported strong passing attacks but neither the combination of Stan Banash to Ed Young for the Foresters nor the duo of Harvey Dean to Jack Kers- ten for the Mugwumps could pro- duce a sole touchdown in regula- tion play. The closest the Foresters ever came to scoring was.after they received the kickoff and drove to the Mugwumps' 25 yard line only to lose the ball on downs. The Mugwumps main threat soon followed when Kersten caught a long pass from Dean and carried to the 15 only to have an inter- ception stop them on the next play. * * * Alpha Chi Sigma, fighting back to overcome a six point deficit in the first half, squeaked past Nu Sigma Nu, 7-6, to win the Profes- sional Fraternity Championship. With less than two minutes to play, Don Demondo, Alpha Chi back, passed to Ron Clark for a 25 yard scoring play, and then tossed to Bill Nemec for the ex- tra point and the game. Nu Sigma Nu reached the dia- gonal stripes four plays after they received the opening kickoff when Tom Peterson took th° ball on a reverse from Bill Bartlett and fired a pass to Dick Park for their 6-0 lead which was not big enough to win the game and retain the title they had won last year. stadium GLOVES \Oc']' D 4 3 ,° yt 0 C'1o4ih9 fate 11 I I For your new suit for the holidays, for your winter overcoat . . . come in now while our selections are still plentiful and let us help you choose the fabric and fashion that most become you. Our expert tailors will do the rest with a "know- how" born of more than 50 years of fine tailoring. And the cost is surprisingly low. Wow $395 " Wear your school col- ors-or your favorite color combination ... these handsome Broadside men's gloves come in a rainbow of rich, high shades! And what's more, they're two gloves in one-double your money's worth! 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