WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1953 PAGE SEVEN Lambda Chi SoftballersNipZBT, 5-2 A SPIRITED FRESHMAN threw himself at the blocking dummy with a fanatic disregard for personal safety, and coach Ben Oosterbaan turned to an admiring group of newsmen exclaiming "The attitude of these boys has been just terrific this spring!" The Michigan mentor was strong in his belief that this had been a most eventful spring on Ferry Field. He went on to point out that attendance had been much better this year than previously, and that the necessary fundamentals had been imparted to the candi- dates for the 1953 varsity. The major function of the out of season football practice is to lay the groundwork for the all-important drills #at the outset of the autumn. The fundamentals and basic plays are taught now, while the finesse is left for the pre-season practice. y "We're having our intra-squad game in the stadium this Sat- urday," the coach informed the interested listeners. Then turning on his famous grin, which made the mid-afternoon sun seem cold by comparison, he quipped "and of course everyone is welcome." Someone asked if there would be an admission charge, as is the case at the intra-squad (Green and White) game of an agricul- tural school to the northwest. Big Ben just laughed and replied in the negative. The scrimmage is slated to begin at 2:30. As the climax to the practice, the annual award of the Meyer W.' Morton trophy to the most improved player will also take place on * Saturday afternoon. Last year's winner was Gene Knutson. while former Michigan captain "Tim" Green was the recipient in 1951. * * * * Game Atmosphere .. . THE SPRING GRID DRILLS, a much overlooked facet of Michigan's warm weather sports program, have taken on almost a game at- mosphere this year. In the past the scrimmages were conducted with one team having possession of the ball all of the time against a squad of redshirts. t These redshirts, made famous by former footballer Allen Jackson in a magazine article last year, played only on defense. They were usually the third and fourth stringers, while the offense consisted of the first string. On defensive maneuvers the procedure was reversed with the redshirts working on offense against the first string defense. Now, with the return of iron man football to the collegiate scene, the practice procedure has been drastically altered. The first string, that is the eleven best two-way players, works out against the second string. The philosophy behind this is to create two units both capable of high caliber play on offense and defense. The same process is used with the third and fourth strings and results in 44 well trained two-way players if carried on properly. Under the new system practices are immeasurably more interest- ing than last year. The two-way scrimmages bear all the earmarks of actual games, except for the fact that there has as yet been no punting. It has been the custom to run four downs and if the sufficient yardage is not gained to relinquish possession on the spot to the other team. V* Condition Counts... EVERY DAY it becomes more apparent that condition will be a key factor in the success enjoyed by teams in 1953. The two-way grind is tough on players softened by the modern specialization of mid- century football. The team in the best physical condition is going to be the team on top at the end of the season. Though the new rul may slow the tempo of football this autumn, the game is still going to have the same ingredients that it has had since its inception; namely blocking and tackling. The team that plays the soundest fundamental football is going to come out ahead, new rules haven't changed the great fall passtime that much. f The new rule will benefit teams like Iowa, Indiana, Marquette and other medium sized schools who are consistently scheduling the larger and more imposing football powers. In the past these teams have always been potent until the last quarter, at which time their lack of depth resulted in complete collapse. A classic example would be the Marquette-Michigan State game of 1951. This was the contest in which the unrated Hilltoppers bat- tled into the last period leading the mightiest team in the land by a 14-6 score. Then the telling effect of 45 minutes of pounding from an army of Spartan reserves took its toll of the Marquette squad. Within a few minutes the Spartans struck for a pair of touchdowns and a 20-14 vietory. Winon Gridiron... UNDER THE NEW CODES this wearing down process is still a part of the game, but it is not quite so easy to accomplish as in previous seasons. Coach Biggie Munn can start one team, play it for five min- utes, and then repeat the procedure twice more in each quarter. This will certainly put pressure on less fortunately endowed opposition, but the days are gone when the Spartan coach can send in four sep- arate teams in one series of downs. Football games are definitely going to have to be won on the gridiron and not on the bench, as has been the case since the war. One particular Indiana game comes to mind when the subject of depth is brought up. That was the Notre Dame contest of 1949. The Hoosiers, playing inspired football held a heavily favored Frank Leahey team to a 6-6 deadlock at halftime. In the final thirty minutes however, Notre Dame rolled to six touchdowns through a disintigrat- ing Indiana line. The final score was 48-6, and Irish depth proved to be the difference. Admittedly the new rule would not have saved the Hoosiers from defeat, but there is room for conjecture as to whether thefinal outcome would have been as convincing If Notre Dame had been forced to adhere to the one-platoon statute. The Hoosier traveling squad that year was all of 33 men. As far as the lads from Bloomington were concerned "depth" was just another word in the dictionary. New rules are not going to change the game of football as much as many pessimists would have the sports fans believe. They still pay off on a well-executed cross-body block and a hard-driving shoul- der tackle, and by and large the good teams of last season will be good teams again, if only by a little smaller margins. Casemier Be In Winning! By PHIL DOUGLIS Jay Casemier, hurling his fourth win of the season, pitched Lambda Chi Alpha to a 5-2 win over Zeta Beta Tau yesterday in a fraternity league first place playoff quarter- final game. s Throttling ZBT on three hits, Casemier struck out nine and was rarely in trouble. Hal Cruger pro- vided the Lambda Chi Alpha scor- ing punch by blasting a three run homer in the first inning. CASEMIER easily bested ZBT's Howie Sokol, also considered a fine pitcher. Casemier time and time again had ZBT batters swing- ing futily at the air, as he came in with his blazing underhand deliveries. In another first place playoff quarter-final, Pi Lambda Phi downed Chi Psi, 4-2, with Sid Amster pitching three hit ball for the winners. The Pilams BGolfers Strong In Conference (Fourth of a series) Led by sophomore Don Albert, the Purdue Boilermakers are mak- ing a strong bid for this year's Big Ten Crown. Winning seven straight pre-sea- son matches, the Riveters are co- favorites along with Michigan, Wisconsin, and Ohio State to cop the title. ALBERT, WINNER of the West- ern Junior Championship last summer, will occupy the number one position for the Purdue link-' sters. Coach Sam Vionoff, starting his third year with Purdue, will field a six man team. He has four returning lettermen includ- ing Albert, Bob Benning, Dick Norton, and Charles Huff. Benning, playing second spot on the squad, holds the season's low score, firing a 66 against Western Kentucky. He also scored a hole- in-one in a triangular meet with Ohio State and Iowa last year. . * * THE SQUAD will be rounded off with freshman numeral winners Ron Pierce and Bob Kruger, for- mer Illinois State High School .r'itlest. Purdue wound up last sea- son with a record of 15-3 en- titling them to the runner-up spot behind Michigan in the Big Ten standings. This year they have not played a conference match although they were scheduled to play in a quadran- gular meet with Michigan, Ohio State, and Indiana April 19, but were snowed out. The Boilermaker squad played the Hoosiers at Indiana last Tues- day and will play the fighting II- lini 'next Monday in Champaign. The Riveter squad comes to Ann Arbor May 16 to meet Ohio, Michi- gan State, and the Wolverines. Sailors Take 'Second Place Sailing under cloudy skies, Michigan's sailing club placed second among six mid-western colleges in the Michigan Regional Regatta held last Saturday at Lake Lansing near Michigan State College. Purdue representatives captured first place with a total of 69 points only six ahead of Michigan's effort of 63. Notre Dame, Toledo, M'ich- igan State and Detroit finished behind Michigan in that order. 'sts Sokol umber Four pulled off a triple play in the first inning as Amster struck out Ron Wells, and Dale Ewart and Bob Sabo were both caughte off base. The Pilams broke a 2-2 tie in the fourth, when Bernie Kimmel dashed home from third on Ken Dickstein's fly ball, and from there on they were never headed. * * * IN YESTERDAY'S third first place playoff quarter-final, Phi Delta Theta pounded Kappa Sig-* ma, 8-3. Hank Heil, pitching four hit ball for the Phi Delts, was giv- en some lusty support by Doug JACK CARROLL Lawrence, who bashed a home run . . . relay reliable and a double. The Phi Delts scored first, picking up a pair in the second Cndermen as Heil, Bruce Rogers, and Jan Wa;nh smashed consecutive An e M S doublesX. They were never head- ed as they scored two more runs in fifth, and then came up with Re four in thesixth. Don MitchellR ela M eet homered in the fifth for the Kappa Sigs. In a second place playoff game, KEN COPP Theta Xi whipped Sigma Kappa special o The Daly 14-10. Theta Xi tallied seven EAST LANSING - Coach Don times in the first, and then poured Canham's tracksters rolled to an across seven more in the second, impressive victory over Michigan as Bruce Bacon led the blistering Normal and host Michigan State attack with a triple and single. in an unofficial track meet here Dale Bock was the winning hurler. yesterday by taking eleven firsts Lambda Chi Alpha set the stage in a program of fourteen events. for its win over ZBT by downing Theta Chi earlier in the after- There was no team scoring in noon, 4-3. Actually, only one inn- the experimental meet, which was ing of this game was played today, held mainly to give the coaches an the rest having been played last idea how their men would per- Tuesday. Due to a protest over a form under conditions similar to time technicality, the last inning the Big Ten Relays to be inaugu- of the game was played this after- rated next spring. noon with no new developments * * * occuring, and the score remaining THE MILE relay team composed the same as it was last Tuesday. of Grant Scruggs, Bill Barton, Dan .*Hickman and Jack Carroll led the ON THE professional fraternity performers as they bettered a front, Alpha Kappa Psi ran all State field record by four seconds. over a hapless Phi Delta Chi The old record had been set by a squad, 19-2. Johnny Reeber was quartet from Western Michigan the star of the occasion, hurling College in 1937. the win and garnering a home run and a single. The Alpha Kaps In the 880-yard hurdle shuttle broke the game open in the late relay, which was being run for innings, when they tallied seven the first time in track competi- times in the fourth and nine times tion, the Wolverines emerged as in the fifth. victors after the first place State The other scheduled profes- team had been disqualified. sional fraternity softball games In other events of the day, the were forfeit affairs, with Phi 440-yard relay with Van Bruner, Deay Epsilon pickng up an Dave Hessler, Ross Coates and Joe and the Air Force-Phi Alpha La Rue running, and the 880-yard Kappa game winding up a I relay team of Coates, Scruggs, Car- Kappae gamfe widgu aroll and LaRue won their events Turning to faculty volleyball, by wide margins.e the big tourney came to an end THE TWO MILE relay team only yesterday, as the Psychology "A" managed to take a seond place squad won the championship by as State shot out front at the downing an aggregation repre- start and stayed there throughout senting the University Museumsthe rest of the race. Psych took four straight, matches a to gain the title. Bob Cutting, Billy Buck, and In the consolation round, the George Jayne took first, third, Physical Education department and fourth places in the 1000- soundly whipped the Willow Run yard run with State's Lyle Garbe Research Center "Digits," also in taking second. four straight matches. In other individual perform- ances, George Lynch won the two I- Scores mile, Geoff Dooley took a special .secHl440-yard run for distance men and ResidenceydBall Tenms Milt Mead won the high jump. Taylor 3, Lloyd 0* * Adams 3, AWen-Rumsey 0 With Roland Nilsson missing Hayden 2, Strauss 1 the meet because of an examina- Michigan 8, Huber 1 tion, Roy Pella captured first place Cooley 3, Winchell 0 ronors in thehdiscus and second Williams 2, Greene 1 place in the shot put. Independent Tennis Other Michigan firsts were Dave Mich. Christian Fellowship 2, Stinson in the broad jump and Standish-Evans 1 a first place tie by Roger Maugh Tortfeasor's 2, Wesleyan 1 in the pole vault. Newman 3, Canterbury 0 Hawaiians 3, Lester Co-op 0 Professional Fraternity Tennis HAIR STYLING Phi Delta Chi 3, Phi Chi 0 TO PLEASE! Phi Delta Phi 3, Alpha Chi for Sigma 0 Fraternity Horseshoes Women and Children Phi Sigma Kappa 2, Tau Kappa No Appointments Needed Epsilon 1 The Dascola Barbers Delta Kappa Epsilon 2, Sigma Liberty near State Alpha Mu 1 Phi Sigma Delta 3, Acacia 0 By DAVE LIVINGSTON Coach Ray Fisher's Wolverines suffered their worst jolt last week- end as the Big Ten baseball stand- ings received a severe shaking up. Saturday's double loss to Iowa plumeted Michigan from the top rung in the diamond race into a three-way tie for fourth with Illi- nois and the Hawkeyes. MEANWHILE Northwestern and Wisconsin, who were rained out of a scheduled three game series at Madison, moved into the con- ference lead with a pair of vic- tories apiece. Always-dangerous Ohio State rolled into the third spot, whip- ping Purdue in a single game on Friday and administering a double setback to Indiana the next day. Since the 19-9 drubbing the' Buckeyes took from Michigan in the conference opener for both clubs, the Ohioans have racked up five straight victories to loom as a big obstacle blocking the cham- pionship dreams of rival Big Ten mentors. IF THE heretofore uncoopera- tive weatherman doesn't interfere, this coming weekend should go a long way toward throwing a clear- er light on the title race. The pace-setting Badgerssget their first real test of the sea- son, visiting Ohio State on Fri- day and Illinois Saturday for a twin-bill, while their co-leader, Northwestern, meets the Buck- eyes and Illini on alternate days. The Wolverines train their sights on East Lansing where they hope to get back on the elusive victory trail in a three-game ser- les with Michigan State. BIG TEN STANDINGS Wisconsin 2 0 1.000 Northwestern 2 0 1.000 Ohio State 5 1 .833 MICHIGAN 4 2 .667 Illinois 4 2 .667 Iowa 2 1 .667 Minnesota 1 2 .333 Michigan State 2 4 .333 Indiana 0 5 .000 Purdue 0 5 .000 ON THE CAMPUS .. . Nearly EVERYONE trades at LUMBARD'S UNIVERSITY DRUG Mierotoic A precision instrument for professional hands Microtomic-the finest example of research in drawing pencils. Designed to stand the most rigid drafting room comparisons. Test them today Only Microtomic offers you- HI-DENSITY LEADS Lines are absolutely opaque to- actinic rays. ABSOLUTELY UNIFORM Every Microtomic of the same degree marking is identical. NEW DUSK GRAY Professional men acclaim it the best color for a drawing pencil.~ BULL'S EYE DEGREE MARKING Easier to read - easier to find - positive identification. ALSO Choice of holders and Microtomic S leads. THE SPARTANS traded oppon- ents with Michigan last weekend, and came through the ordeal with better luck than did the Wolver- ines. They beat Iowa Friday, then split with Minnesota Saturday, while Michigan could salvage only a single win over Minnesota. Even at that, the Wolverines may have been fortunate. The Gophers elected to save their All-American pitcher (and tail- back on the gridiron), Paul Giel, for Michigan State in hopes WILDCATS, BADGERS ON TOP: M' Nine Jolted From Big Ten Lead BATTING AVERAGES Tadian 2 0 1 Billings 21 2 8 Harrington 6 1 2 Corbett 42 8 13 Haynam 46 8 14 Sabuco 56 7 17 Eaddy 5:3 9 14 Mogk 58 12 15- Howell 43 9 11 Lepley 5:3 7 12 Leach 52 10 11 Cline 20 4 4 Pavichevich 11 0 2 Ritter 12 1 2 Wisniewski 12 1 1 Yirkosky 5 0 0 woschitz 2 0 0 Fancher 1 0 0 .500 .381 .333 .310 .304 .304 .264 .259 .256 .227 .211 .200 .182 .167 .083 .000 .000 .000 Read and Use Daily Classifieds that the fire-balling righthand- er could win a doubleheader from the Spartans. As things' turned out Giel won only the first game at East Lan- sing, although he did pull an iron man stunt and hurl both games, but Michigan was spared facing his blazing fastball on Friday. With 15 games already in the record books, and 11 to go, center- fielder Bill Billings leads all Wol- verine hitters with eight safeties in 21 times at bat for a potent .381 average. . Only three other regulars rest above the .300 mark. Pitcher- rightfielder Jack Corbett boasts a .310 average with 14 hits in 42 at bats, while the keystone com- bination of Gil Sabuco and Bruce Haynam are each hitting at a .304 clip. " 49 SPEED! COiNiROLI tONG dIEE! Set after set, on any playing sur- face, these Twins of Champion- ship Tennis deliver "new ball" performance...maintain their 'TSON precision-built accuracy of flightA~ and bounce!I In every National Championship, U. S. Davis Cup and Wightman Cup match ... in major tourna- ments everywhere ... Spalding- made tennis balls are the Official' choice. Try a Spalding or Wright & Ditson and you'll know why. p.U.S.l.T,. CAMPIONSHP "fir$ l SPAtDINII Sets the Pace in Tennis fli~,TflI TESTED TO 06/Vt YOU TOP CONTROL TRADE MARSEG. U. S. 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