rTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1951 PAGE THREE woommompwo Wolverine Jieven E barks for Ithaca Tonight IM ROUND-UP: Four Fraternities Fight Fo OTIntramural L aurels By DICK LEWIS Yesterday's snow and rain, which washed out a full slate of intramural gridiron activity, did little to clear up the blanket point spread that exists in fraternity championship competition. Four fraternities are battling for the overall lead. Thlese include Delta Sigma Phi which has gar- nered 282 points in three sports, ATO whose total is 143 plus a sure 130 and a possible 150 foot- ball markers, Kappa Sigma with 196 and a possible 90 in football, and Phi Delta Theta which has tallied 255 points for the season. * * * DELTA SIGMA PHI, the de- fending football kingpins, were discouraged from a repeat of last year by a 27-0 loss in the first place playoffs. Kappa Sigma, now in the quarter finals of the third place playoffs, took both track and cross country laurels. ATO was also involved in the tri- ple tie for track honors. Current football action is en- tering the semi-final round of the first place playoffs. Phi Gamma Delta, ATO, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Sigma Phi have all reached the quarter finals and a minimum of 130 points. The Phi Gams, 14-0 victors over Psi Upsilon, are scheduled to meet ATO, which scored a 19-7 win over Phi Delta Theta and mauled Tri- angle 51-0. Last Tuesday, these teams played to a scoreless tie. * * * THE OTHER semi-final action will pit Sigma Phi Epsilon which conquered Delta Sigma Phi 27-0 and Pi Lambda Phi 20-12, against Sigma Chi, 32-13 winner over Phi Kappa Psi. Fraternity volleyball, divided into ten 4-team divisions, is in its second week of play. Phi Delta Theta and Pi Lambda Phi both boast unblemished records of 12-0. Going into last night's action, ATO and Theta XI had 6-0 slates. Other contenders are featured by Chi Phi (10-2), Chi Psi (10-2) and Beta Theta Pi (9-3). First place playoffs in profes- sional fraternity football were scheduled for today, but probably will be postponed until weather permits. * ~* * THE OPENING round features competition among four undefeat- ed clubs. Psi Omega (4-0) meets Delta Sigma Delta (4-0), while Alpha Kappa Kappa (4-0) faces the Law Club 'A' team (4-0). Professional fraternity volley- ball, in its second week of play, shows five undefeated teams. Alpha Kappa Kappa, Tau Epsi- lon Rho, Delta Sigma Delta, Alpha Kappa Psi, and the Air Force, all with 6-0 records, are the five. Residence Hall football warfare has reached the final round in the first place playoffs. Huber, which chalked up a 13-0 score over.Wen- ley, next week will meet Hayden, 12-0 victor over Winchell, for the crown. ** * VOLLEY BALL activity in the dorm league finds Adams (12-0), Allen-Rumsey (11-1), and Chica- go (9-3) at the head of their divi- sions. Wenley and Prescott have identical 8-4 records for a flat- footed tie in the fourth division. Independent title play is also keen, with the Newman Club holding a slim 185-167 lead over the Forecasters. The two lead- ers divided the first two sports of the season, the Foresters ca- turing the track bunting and the Newman Club cross country honors. The independent football cham- pionship wil be decided among the Foresters, Newman Club and Wes- leyan, while volleyball, in its initial week, is headed by the Actuaries with a 5-1 slate. A 16-team faculty volleyball league begins November 15, and a faculty elimination bowling tourney is scheduled to com- mence on November 23. TOM FABIAN earned a mara- thon 1-6, 17-15, 6-4 triumph over Jay Millman to move into the fi- nals, while Tom Drenton a 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 winner over Jerry Rovner, and Bob Russel, who won a 6-2, 6-4 match from Don Shreffer, will contest for the other final berth. 'li Sharpens Secondary For Big Red By HERB NEIl4 The Wolverines entrain for Ithaca tonight after sharpening up their pass defense in a stiff scrim- mage yesterday afternoon at Ferry Field amid continuous snow flur- ries. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan will run his squad through a short practice this afternoon before the team leaves for the East at 9:33. * * * EXPECTING to see the aerial attack of Cornell's Rocco Calvo rain, shine, or snow Saturday the Wolverines put in their second straight day of concentrating on breaking up passes in the snow. Lowell Perry, who is suffer- ing from an ankle injury, was in uniform yesterday but did not engage in any of the drills. He trotted around the field, but it was evident that the ankle bothered the star end. Oosterbaan employed a number1 of men in the secondary in yester- day's defensive drills.1 * * * * AT THE HALFBACK posts he used the regular defensive backs,, Dave Tinkham and Don Oldham, as well as Tom Witherspoon, Russ Rescorla, and Don Zanfagna. Witherspoon looked especially good in covering opposing pass re- ceivers. Bill Putich and Oldham both worked in the safety slot. Old- ham may see considerable action at this position Saturday in place of Perry. The line backers, Roger Zatkoff, Ted Topor, Larry LeClaire, and Gene Knutson, did their usual fine job in halting the reserves before the latter could pick up yardage. End Russ Osterman and tackle Jim Balog got through to stop thet reserves for a number of losses. 3 * * * IN THE offensive drills which ROCCO CALVO . threatens 'M' defense * * followed the defensive concentra- tion the second and third string backfields got a chance to show their attacking power. Most of this portion of yesterday's prac- tice was devoted to the running game. Don Eaddy at the tailback post, fullback LeClaire, and right halfback Witherspoon got away several long runs against the reserves. LeClaire and Res- corla, who also worked at the fullback post, were effective in pushing through the middle of the line, while the halfbacks skirted end for the most part. A few passes were thrown by the varsity during the scrimmage with Topor, Captain Bill Putich, Eaddy, and Duncan McDonald do- ing the majority of the throwing. * * END Fred Pickard made several fine catches in the snow which in- dicates that he may be able to take up some of the slack in the pass re- ceiving department which will re- sult if Perry is sidelined. Old Rivalry' A t Cornell 1 By IVAN KAYEt Michigan and Cornell, a couplex of old-timers in the inter-collegi- ate football world, will face each. other on the gridiron of Schoell- kopf Field on Saturday for the first time in eighteen years. It was seventy-eight years ago< that thirty Michigan students first issued a challenge by mail to Cor- nell University for a football con-_ test to be staged in the neutral city of Cleveland. * * * THE LETTER was received by Andrew White, who three years earlier had gone from the Ann Ar- bor campus to assume the first presidency of Ezra Cornell's new university. White wrote a reply which became a football classic when he said, "I will not permit thirty men to travel four hundred miles merely to agitate a bag of wind.'' It took sixteen years for the Cornell president to mellow his1 attitude, and finally in 1889 Michigan and the Big Red met on the field of friendly strife. The boys from the West, new to the game of football, absorbed a 66-0 beating from the Ivy League school. This defeat in- cidentally, still stands as the worst ever inflicted on a Michi- gan team. The two schools met eight times back in the "Stone Age" of foot- ball and the Ithacans won the first seven. In the twentieth century however, the Wolverines have been SPORTS HERB COHEN: Night Editor Dick Wakefield, Peck's bad boy of baseball, was given another chance yesterday. The Cleveland Indians announc- ed that the former Michigan ath- lete would be granted a spring training tryout. Wakefield, who makes his home in Ann Arbor, seemed anxious to return to the diamond wars, when interviewed. HE OPINED that he's "gotta make a living" and seemed set on doing so next February in Tucson. When Wakefield starts to swing his potential big stick in the In- dian training camp, it will be the first time he has held the lumber since early last spring. Instrumental in Wakefield's renaissance was Hank Green- berg, general manager of the In- dians. Greenberg, who wore the same uniform with Wakefield at Detroit, said that Dick "has so much potential as # hitter that I'm going to give him what prob- ably will be his last chance." The former Michigan home-run king knew as early as last year that he would get a chance with the Cleveland nine. But Tribe manager Al Lopez balked at sign- ing the Tiger "bonus baby" late in the 1951 pennant chase, be- cause he was dubious about the outfielder's condition. IN THE PAST week, Wakefield has been working out at the intra- mural building in a preliminary -M Scores VOLLEYBALL Itawalians 6, 1AS Arrows 0 IA E Pi 4, Acacia 2 Foresters 6, Nelson House 0 Phi Sigma Kappa 6, Tau Kappa Ep- silon 0 Phi Sigma Delta 3, Lambda Chi Alpha 3 Theta Xi 4, 'theta Delta Chi 2 rATO 3, Sigma Phi 3 Phi Alpha Kappa 4, Psi Omega 2 IDelta Tau Delta 6, Triangle 0 Phi Kappa Tai 5, Zeta Psi 1 SPhi Gamma Delta 6, Kappa Num 0 Sigma Phi Epsilon 6, Alpha Phi Alpha 0 Theta Chi 6, Sigma Ni t0 when he Western ship. Wakefield slugged .368, and set Big Ten records for the most total bases (42), most home runs (5), and most runs batted in (25). SOON AFTER, he was signed by Detroit for a $52,000 bonus, and he lived up to his rave notices by clubbing .316 in 1943 and a phe- nomenal .355 in 1944. The follow- ing year, Wakefield entered the armed forces, and was never the same thereafter. Wakefield never returned to his pre-war form when he came back to the Tigers, and conse- quently spent a few seasons gathering splinters on the bench. Detroit sold him to the New York Yankees at the conclusion of the 1949 campaign. The flamboyant fielder held out during the spring of 1950 however, and the Yankees promptly sold him to the Chicago White Sox. RAMBUNCTIOUS Richard promptly balked at reporting, whereupon the Yankees optioned him to the Oakland Oaks of the Class Triple - A Pacific Coast League. Wakefield failed to make the grade with the West Coast en- try. In a probationary period last year, Wakefield tried to prove him- self for the Oaks as a dollar-a-year man, but was again released. LATE HOCKEY SCORES Detroit 4, New York 4 (Tie) Toronto 1, Chicago 0 'M' Renews Wakefield To Get Tryout with Cleveland _________ * * * _________ led the Wolverines to the Conference champion- DICK WAKEFIELD . .. one more chance * * * attempt to return to his old form. He has not been working during I the off-season. When Greenberg made the announcement, Wakefield was shopping for a new automobile. His 1951 hard-top convertible was stolen Tuesday by several teenagers, and demolished in a wreck on icy roads.I Baseball's problem child first came into prominence in 1941 BIG TEN NEWS: Badgers Top Statistics IU Replacement Pending j i t it E i , 1 1 far more successful, winning four of the eight games played and outscoring the foe 159-98. The last two meetings, 1917 and 1933, end- ed in 42-0 and 40-0 victories for Michigan. * * * CORNELL holds an 11-5 edge on the Wolverines due mainly to the games played in the last century, when Michigan was just beginning to experiment with the new game.! The Big Red thus stands as the only team other than Army to hold a series edge on the Maize and Blue. PART TIME SALESMAN EXPERIENCE PREFERRED * Apply in person or by letter * Please do not telephone State hours available Open 'til 6 P.M. SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washing ton Makes a Man Love a Pipe and a Woman Lovea Man R EAD and USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Rabideau-llarris U f :- bets you a new shirt that the airplane cloth collar outlives the shirt '". ? . a I , . fd l I dCHAS SIA% ..6.K omh To-morrow, hundreds of cold faced alarm clocks will send us hundreds of customers. An hour after they ring ... our cash register will start. 75c OUT OF $1. for warm woolen hose. $2.50 OUT OF $5. for cozier underwear. ? By T1he Associated Pres CHICAGO-Wisconsin, nestling in third placein Western Confer- ence football standings, dominates the loop's statistical field. Official compilations released today show that coach Ivy Wil- liamson's Badgers have main- tained their leadership in both team offensive and defensive play. They lead the nation and the con- ference on defense, limiting their opposition to an average of 136.2 yards per game. UNDEFEATED Illinois is run- ner-up in the defense department with a 230.3 yards per game, but ranks seventh in total offense. Minnesota shares second place in offense with Iowa. Wisconsin's offense was slowed only slightly on a snow- packed field last week against Indiana. The Badger offensive average dropped only 10 yards to 367.8 yards a game. Wisconsin made all 10 of the points that have been scored against Illinois, the leader, in three conference games this year. Statistically, this means the Illini opponents have averaged 3.3 points a game, and gives Illinois the best defensive record where it counts, at the goal line. * * has been completing almost half, 11.8.C Minnesota and Iowa, the run-I nersup offensively, have been averaging 322.3 and 322.5 yards per game, respectively. * * * BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Don Veller of Florida State, Chuck Benett of LaGrange, Ill., high school and Earl (Greasy) Neale, former Philadelphia Eagles Pro Coach, figured last night in specu- lation over who will replace Clyde Smith as Indiana University foot- ball coach. * * * SMITH QUIT with two years to go on his contract - the tenth Indiana coach who railed to pro- Smith resigned Tuesday in the wake of criticism from alumni and students. Officially, the university apparently has made no definite move toward hiring a successor. duce a winning record during his tenure. Criticism of Smith began several weeks ago when Notre Dame and Michigan walloped the Hoosiers. . 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