TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1950 THE MICHIGAN DAILY schi To Open pie s for. New . ~:. ;s ° . . Final Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL I ................... 6 , LADIES DAY: Michigan Sailors Whip MSC at Whitmore Lake Casey Sure His Mound Staff Can Stop W hiz Kids New York .....' Detroit ....... Boston Cleveland Washington ... Chicago St. Louis..,.. . Philadelphia . W L: 98 56. 95 59 94 60. 92 62 67 87 60 94 58 96, 52 102 Pet. GB .636 .617 3 .610 4 .597 6 .435 31 .390 38 .377 40 .338 46 By LARRY SPERLING Not to be discouraged by the football team's loss to Michigan State, the Wolverines sailing team took to the sea Sunday and hand- ed the Spartan boatmen an 80-41 beating. The Michigan sailors showed their superiority by capturing first place in each of the five IM Sotes RESIDENCE HALLS Hinsdale 8, Tyler 13 Lloyd 0, Fletcher 6 Prescott 0, Greene 7 Winchell 13, Allen-Rumsey 0 Strauss 0, Michigan 19 Chicago 0, Vaughan 8 Wenley 0, Anderson 13 Adams 0, Cooley 18 PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIES Psi Omega 12, Alpha Omega 0 Delta Sigma Delta forfeited to Sigma Delta Chi. races, taking full advantage of their knowledge of the Whitmore Lake course. Renate 'Red' Oppenheimer was the individual star of the day as she skippered her dinghy to two of the five Michigan first places. 'RED' HOT 'Red' proved to those who be- lieve that athletics is strictly a man's field that given half a chance a female can outdo a bunch of males any day of the Week. The men were kept from sinking into complete obscurity by Com- modore Don McVitty, Paul Paris, and Bob Allen who took firsts in their individual races. Vor the Wolverines who have two sailing seasons, one in the spring and one in the fall this was the first meet of the current fall season and,.as the score shows a highly successful start. MORE ACTION Next week The Michigan Sail- ing Club is entered in the Mid- west Women's Championship held this year at Ohio State. The Wolverines are anxious to' add this title to their collection. At present they are the holders of the midwest teamand individual championships, honors which they captured during the spring sea- son. The sailors are hoping that the fall campaign will be as success- fill as the spring season which they swept through undefeated and captured an invitation to the National Championship Regatta at California. ::.: :::::A.:........... ..*.*'*'*. NEW YORK - () - Manager Casey Stengel today named right- hander Vie Raschi to hurl the opening game of the World Series Wednesday and scoffed at the odds which established the Yan- kees as heavy favorites over the Philadelphia Phils "Raschi is my man," the Yan- ket skipper told a group of re- porters who had gone out to Yan- kee Stadium to watch the Ameri- can League champions work out. "Vic has been my big pitcher all year. ie deserves the first shot." REYNOLDS SECOND CHOICE Casey said Allie Reynolds (16- 12) definitely willestart the second game. He thinks his third ptcher might be southpaw Ed Lopat (18- 8). but isn't sure. "It's too far to look ahead," he said. Told that the Phils are under- dogs at odds ranging from 2-1 to 13-5, Casey let out with a loud gaff aw. "Those people know from noth- ing," he said. "That's a good ball club over in Philadelphia. It had to be good to beat a red hot Brook- lyn team in the biggest game of -Dauy-nurt Sapowitch PICTURE OF DESPAIR-Michigan's veteran tailback, Chuck Ort- mann, registers anxiety after his ankle injury in the first period of the Michgan State game Saturday afternoon sidelined him. * * * * * * KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR 9 Hairstylists No Waiting Hours: 8:30 to 5:30 DASCOLA BROS. Liberty near State Defeat of Michigan larks Spartans as Gridiron Power By TED PAPES As of last Saturday, the word' 'upset' is obsolete withreference to any Michigan State football con- quest. The Spartans banished all doubts that they can hold their own in the Big Ten when they startled Michigan on opening day. It was their inspired and polished gridiron tactics more than any other factor that made the victory possible. In their wake they left the Wol- verines with the usual assortment of bumps and bruises besides their first loss of the season. Chuck Ortmann, who was side- lined in the first period and did not return to action, sustained a sprained right ankle, Trainer Jim. Hunt reported yesterday that he could not yet determine whether the versatile halfback would be ready for Dartmouth this week- end. . KOCESKI READY Ortmann's mishap came at the end of a fine runback of a Michi- gan State punt. He pulled himself out of a pileup on the Wolverine 35, favoring his right leg, only to have it crumble beneath him on the subsequent play as he stepped back to pass. Michigan's other first string halfback, Leo Koceski, was cut badly in the ear but three stitches have repaired the damage. The Wolverines made several opening-game errors which would not have been so costly with a less fiery opponent. Against the backdrop of State's brilliance they probably appeared worse than was the actual case.; Wild passing was mingled with accurate tosses by both Bill Putich and Don Peterson who took up the slack in Ortmann's absence. The 13 passes completed established the fact that Michigan is poten- tially stronger in the air than it was last year. DOROW PASSES WELL The Spartans gained 108 yards passing against 133 for the losers. Visiting quarterback Al Dorow pre- sented a highly poised aerial at- tack, an element which was miss- ing when State lost here a year ago. Many observers criticized the Wolverines for their play at the close of the second period. They had a first down on the Spartan 19 in the closing minute and moved to the 14 on the next play. With the clock ticking away, Putich failed on two desperation pass attempts as Michigan rooters prayed for a time-out call. Not too many of them realized that the team had already used up its limit of five rests in the half. A break would have cost five yardsband Coach Bennie Ooster- baan elected to try the same stra- tegy which paid off against Min- nesota last year. WORKED THEN In that game Putich engineered a last-minute drive which culmin- ated in a touchdown with only ten seconds remaining in the first half without the benefit of an addition- al time out. Michigan certainly was not alone in defeat Saturday. The day turned out to be one of the most disasterous in the history of the Western Conference as four of the nine teams which will battle for the league title were beaten and a fifth was tied by non-Con- ference foes. Ohio State watched helplessly as the Mustangs of Southern Me- thodist scored 19 points in the fourth quarter to win, 32-27. Min- nesota, anoth'er "power,' succumb- ed to Washington, 28-13. HOOSIERS TIE Purdue tasted defeat at the hands of Texas' Longhorns by a 34-26 count, and the best Indiana could do was deadlock with Ne- braska, 13-13. Northwestern, Wisconsin and Il- linois were the only Big Ten sur- vivors of opening action. They emerged over Iowa State, Mar- quette and Ohio University respec- tively. Early season results bear out original predictions that this cam- paign will be a wide open affair. Buy and Sell Through Daily Classifieds the year for both clubs. CASEY'S CONFIDENT "Of course I think we'll win but they've got some tough pitch- ers. That's the only way they can win-if they get great pitching. I don't think they'll outslug us." Stengel said he has a great deal of respect for pitchers Robin Rob- All Freshmen and Upper- classmen interested in wrestling please report to the I. M. Build- ing from 3-5 p.m. today. -Bob Betzig erts, Ken Heitzelman, Russ Meyer and Bubba Church. Raschi has appeared in two world series but has never opened one. He split two decisions last year. His season's record is 21-8. His mound opponent remained very much in doubt yesterday as the Phils took a day of rest. They are due for a workout today. The Yanks practiced for two hours yes- terday. Guesses are that Manager Eddie Sawyer of the Phils may cpme back with Roberts (20-11), the young righthander who clinched the National League flag for the Phils Sunday. He would have only two days rest, however. The opening day lineup as an- nounced by Stengel is: Gene Woodling, left field Phil Rizzuto, shortstop Larry Berra, catcher Joe DiMaggio, centerfield Johnny Mize, first base Hank Bauer or Cliff Mapes, right field Billy Johnson or Bobby Brown, third base Gerry Coleman, second base Vic Raschi, pitcher The right field and third base starters will depend on the Phil- OSU Juggles Backfield Men. COLUMBUS-ca)-Coach Wes- ley Fesler of Ohio State shifted Vic Janowicz from quarterback to tailback yesterday as he shook up his offensive backfield after Sat- urday's 32-27 loss to Southern Methodist. Janowicz, who scored 15 points for OSU, replaces Skippy Doyle, Rochester, Pa., junior. Janowicz's understudy, Tony Curcillo, is the new starting quarterback, al- though. Janowicz continues to call signals. Curcillo got 59 yards in three runs against SMU; Doyle 26 yards in 11 tries. lies' pitching selection. Bauer and Johnson will start if the Phils nominate a lefthander, Mapes and Brown would be in the lineup against a righthander. * * * Philfly Jumps Over Team's Pennant Win PHILADELPHIA -() - This city recovered slowly yesterday from its finest hangover in 35 years and prepared joyously to root its "Whiz Kids" to victory over the New York Yankees in the World Series. There have been some delirious pennant-winning towns in the past, but none that surpassed Philadelphia. The sidewalks still were crowded with baseball talk- ing fans today, and from the looks of them few had been to bed since Dick Sisler hit his homerun late Sunday in Brooklyn. PHILS DRILL TODAY Manager Eddie Sawyer and his youthful charges slept long after Sunday night's victory celebration at a downtown hotel and roused only late in the afternoon to go to Shibe Park and cut up their share of the series purse. Theyj did not work out, but plan te put in a lengthy batting session today. Everywhere they went in the city they were cheered as conquering heroes. Announcement from American Leauge headquarters that Vic Raschi, the Yankees' husky 21- game winner, will be on the firing line Wednesday brought no reac- tion one way or the other from the Phils. They figure that they licked a pretty fair righthander in Don Newcombe of the Dodgers in clinching the pennant Sunday. SAWYER'S CHOICE UNKNOWN If manager Sawyer had decided on his opening pitcher he was keeping it very much to himself. He half-indicated after Sunday's victory that he would send Robin Roberts, his 20-game winner, right back at the Yanks with only two days of rest, but the local experts were inclined to doubt he would use the youngster. Rather there was a strong feel- ing hereabouts thatSawyer will go with the veteran Ken Heintzelman, a crafty lefthander who serves up quantities of what the baseball trade calls "junk." This type of pitcher has enjoyed marked suc- cess against the Yankees this year. coaxA ~BLE-NO PIPE .z' TOBACCO Players Protest TV Cut ST. LOUIS-(RP)-Marty Mar- ers representative and Hutchin ion declared here last night that commissioner A. B. Chandler had son, Detroit pitcher, represents refused to have a conference with the American League players. him and Freddy Hutchinson about "The least he could have done," the World Series television rights Marion said; "was to call- us in of the players. and talk to us about it. 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