THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE -BrwnesDef eat ____ _________* * * Lemon Gives Three Hits As Tribe Edges Chisox7 , :: ... _ } X. ,.J -i 5 4BIG TEN PREVIEW: en16gS., - Golfers To Fat - ---- By DICK LEWIS butt Pi skin Three years ago a Michigan golf men SpringP i0raetie team returned home from a spring four warmup tour of the South without vidu a victory to its credit. ce Purdue, OSU Saturday - By The Associated Press DETROIT - Manager Rogers Hornsby of the St. Louis Browns yanked two other players for pinchhitting but let pitcher Tom- my Byrne hit for himself in a seventh inning rally and the strange strategy paid off with a 5-4 victory over the Detroit Tig- ers yesterday. What proved to be the winning run came in the eighth inning. Tom Wright beat out an infield hit, George Schmees pushed him home with a triple and Arft's double to center scored Schmees. INDIANS 1, WHITE SOX 0 CHICAGO -Rookie outfielder Jim Fridley's first major league homer and Bob Lemon's three- hit pitching sneaked the Cleve- land Indians to their second straight win over the Chicago White Sox, 1-0, yesterday. Fridley's second-inning smash into the upper left field stands ruined the four-hit performance by Chicago's Joe Dobson. Lemon, the 17-game winner last season, had some uneasy moments in his shutout, the Sox leaving six runnersstranded and failing to do anything about a bases loaded situation in the fourth. YANKS 8, A's 1 PHILADELPHIA-Big Vic Ras- chi, who probably would be the Slated To Begin T1omorrow Oosterbaan Searching Ranks of Aspirants For Replacements in Key Backfield Slots winningest big league pitcherof all time if he could face only the Philadelphia Athletics, beat them again yesterday to give the New York Yankees an 8 to 1 victory in their American League opener. The Yankee ace had a two-hit shutout working when he walked the first two batters to face him in the ninth. When he also tossed two wide ones to Elmer Valo, man- ager Casey Ttengel decided to play things safe and waved in Sain to protect an 8 to 0 lead. DODGERS 14, BRAVESd8 BOSTON-The Brooklyn Dodg- ers pounded out 20 hits and took full advantage of seven errors yes- terday while out-slugging the Bos- ton Braves 14-8 for their second straight win of the new national league season. Roy Campanella continued his heavy bombardment of the Bos- ton pitchers by driving in four runs with a single, double and his first homer of the campaign. Duke Snider added to the opposing-nurl- ers' woes by connecting for sin- gles on the first five of his six batting tries. NIGHT BASEBALL SCORES New York (N) 5, Philadelphia (N) 3. Washington (A) 4, Boston (A) 3 St. Louis (N) 6, Pittsburgh 5 BOB LEMON .. . whitewashes Sox Ray Downs By GENE MACKEVICH It's football time at Michigan once again. f Coach Bennie Osterbaan and his staff will greet approximately 100 candidates at tomorrow's opening day practice of the 1952 sptng football season. * * i UNDER BIG TEN rules, the Wolverines will be permitted 20 practice sessions and six classroom instruction periods. May 17th is the date set to end all spring vork-outs. Fundamentals will be the key word in tomorrow's first prac- tice and this will continue into the first part bf next week. Al- though Oosterbaan plans to send the boys through a scrimmage session as soon as possible, he feels that the coaching staff can not over-stress the import- ance of fundamentals. Few of the 28 lettermen are ex- pected to be on hand for the work outs. They are not obligated to take part in the practices, though some of them come out in order to keep in shape for the fall sea- son. include letterman Laurie LeClaire, Dave Tinkham, and Russ Rescor- la. Sophomore hopefuls expected to report are Dick Balzhiser and Fred Baer. * * * THE quarterback slot seems fairly stable, as compared to other positions on the squad. With both Ted Topor and Duncan McDonald returning to action, and also with Don Zanfagna available for duty, Oosterbaan isn't too worried about the post. Replacements for tackles Tom Johnson and Ralph Stribe are expected to come from Jim Ba- log, Ben Pederson, Don Ben- nett, Roger Zatkoff, Bruce Bar- tholomew or Dick Strozewski. Lettermen guards who are seek- ing Pete Kinyon and Jim Wolter's old positions are Bob Timm, Bob Matheson, Dick Beison and Don Bugger. Graduate guards of last year's frosh squads include Carl It is a matter of record that the 1949 linksters bounced back to win the Big Ten Championship after the trio of setbacks at the hands of Wake Forest, North Carolina and Duke. TIS YEAR'S edition of the Wolverine fairway flailers similar-, ly dropped its first three dual1 matches to the same southern clubs, which have the advantage of year-round practice. But Coach Bert Katzenmeyer is not too quick1 to predict a duplication of the 1949 feat. Katzenmeyer has a wait-and- see outlook on the Western Con- ference race which he calls a tossup among any one of five clubs, including his own charges. And the Wolvernes will get their first acid test Saturday afternoon at Columbus when they meet de- fending champion Ohio State and, runnerup Purdue in a triangular test. . THE BUCKEYES TOOK the crown by 12 strokes last season, c his Bob her Bob nun Ne Geor Wall the main IN tory AndE varsi Guai follo 80. K the fyir tur Co they have lost their top five , including Tom Nieporte, th-place finisher in the indi- al competition. "oach Bob Kepler is building Buck sixsome around senior b Clouse, who ranked as num- four man in 1951, and steady b Anderson, the champions' nber three starter. ewcomers Frank Guarasci, rge Frankenfeld, Ted Katula, Jy Hart and Frank Cardi have inside track on the four re- ning slots. * * * F A RECENT rain-swept vic- over the Ohio State alumni, erson and Katula paced the ity with a pair of 78's, while rasci, Frankenfeld and Hart wed with an 18hole total of Katula also came home with best round in the final quali- rg rounds for the varsity, nuing in a 76 effort. ach Sam Voinoff's Purdue golfers opened their season with a 16-5 verdict over Butler, but then fell before North Carolina, 18%-82, on the first match of a two-match Dixie training junket. Michigan bowed to the Tarheels by a 191/2-7% count. FOUR HOLDOVER major let- ter winners feature a Boilermaker combine which finished fifth in the National Collegiate title meet. But Voinoff, too, is hurt by the loss of last year's senior co-cap- tains, Gene Coulter and Dave Laf- lin. Coulter walked off with the Big Ten individual laurels, shooting a 290 in the 72-hole good enough for the seventh position. Heading the holdover Riveter contingent are seniors Jack Hes- ler, Dick Wibel and Norm Dunlap. Birmingham, Michigan junior Chuck Houffs rounds ou the Pur- due veterans. IRock by KO CHICAGO - () - Champion Sugar Ray Robinson, a boxer turn- ed ferocious slugger, knocked out challenger Rocky Graziano with a, pulverizing left and right in 1:53 of the third round to retain his middleweight title before an in-' door record crowd of 23,785, in the Chicago Stadium last night. Robinson, who weighed 157% / elected to slug it out toe-to-toej "":ยข" :"%vM f hMrEr' :{: ;riiYNv#iNi::,;: :.;a.;; :;::: ii 1K }} world beaters .. for Wear and Style - Something very special in' sport coats-these 'way- x: ahead-of-your crowd styles. They're definitely the latest and greatest: in cut and fabric. , You'll find exactly what you crave in this excitingly colorful col- lection of new checks, plain blocks--in tweeds, shetlands, herringbones and diagonals. These lively jackets have felled edges and pockets, and the prices are right down your budget. $2500 Up from the outset of the fierce scrap WITH THE graduation of tail- and ended it with incredibleswift- back Bill Putich and fullback Don ness after Graziano himself had Peterson, Oosterbaan will be floored the champion midway in ' , the third. searching the ranks for able re- Seconds after Graziano had placements at these two key posi- belted Robinson to the floor along bans, the ropes with a ponderous right- Don Evans, a 180 pound Cha- hand smash to the head, Robinson grin Falls, Ohio sophomore, is a unleashed a lightning quick left- top candidate for a halfback right combination which felled position. Evans showed fine Graziano like a ton of bricks. progress last season until he was Graziano, counted out by ref- sidelined by an injury. Other eree Tommy Gilmore, by game in- halfback hopefuls expected out stinct struggled to his feet and; for drills include Pat Monta- with helpless waving fists tried to gano, Bob Hurley, Tom Wither- continue the battle, He was re- spoon, and Ed Hickey. strained by Gilmore. Promising fullback candidates Sig Eps Resume Winning Way; ATO Wallops Theta Delta Chi Spring activity got under way the two-hit pitching of Bud Engel. this week down at Ferry Field with The score was tied two apiece the opening of the Intramural until the third inning. Then Engel Softball season. and Lyle LaPine each homered as Bill Monroe hurled Alpha Tau the SAE's scored 4 runs in the Omega to a 13-5 win over Theta third and 6 in the fourth inning. Delta Chi yesterday afternoon. The ATO's chalked up seven For the losers, Bob Hastings runs in the second inning with homered with a man on in the Monroe and Cedric Richner each first inning to give Delta Chi slamming out home-runs. Don its only tally. Weir was another big gun at the Eleven runs in the fourth and plate connecting on three for fifth innings gave Sigma Alpha three. *Mu a 13-2 win over Delta Kappa Epsilon. Paul Groffsky and Pat SIGMA Alpha Epsilon trounced Ballis socked round-trippers for Delta Chi 12-2 with the help of the Sammies, and Irv Tobocman was credited with the win. Trya * * * COLLEGIATE CUT -- TUESDAY afternoon, Sigma Phi Epsilon's Larry Gray hurled It's individualistic! I a no-hitter to shut out Alpha Ep- smart . . . suave silon Pi 2-0. Joe Hipfel and Lorne Norton each socked one homer to 9 H Jaircutters to please give the Sig Eps the victory. The Bascola Barbers Corrections on Tuesday's games. Tau Kappa Epsilon 12, Pi Lambda cclgcre colm etiaas 1iees"i - - _________ - Phi Sigma Delta 15, Chii Psi 5 Duback, Harry Kates, Jim Wag- ner and John Threadaway. * * * THE ENDS will be led by Cap- tain Merritt Green. Other flank- ers i~clude Leo Schlicht, Thad Stanford, Gene Knutson, and Bob Dingman. In addition to quarterback, the center position also seems to be rather stable. Dick O'Shaugh- nessy, last season's regular offense pivotman, hopes to gain his old post. J. Paul Sheedy* Switched Because lie Flunked 7 Today's Ganies AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Philadelphia-Lopat (21-9) vs Shantz (18-10). Cleveland at Chicago-Garcia (20- 13) vs Grissom (0-0). Boston at Washington-McDer- mott (8-) or Henry (0-0) vs John- son (7-12) or Hudson (5-12). NA'T'IONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia at New York-Fox (9-14) vs Jansen (23-i1) Pittsburgh at St. Louis-Werle (8- 6) vs Presko (7-4). Chicago at Cincinnati-Kelly (7- 4) vs Raffensberger (16-17). Brooklyn at Boston-Schmitz (2- 6) vs Conley (0-0). d to Wildroot Cream-Oil The Finger-Nail Test SLACKS to complete your outfit , . . $8.95 up SHEEDY looked bird-seedy with his ruffled hair. He didn't know feather to bury his head, or go on a wing-ding! "Owl I ever get a date for the prom?" he asked his tree roommates. 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