FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1952 TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE FROM CALIFORNIA: Stanford Editor Gives Scoop on Indian (Editor's Note: Larry Cahn, Sports we hav Editor of the Stanford Daily, wrote us earlier this fall and asked for a name o story giving the Michigan end of pears e the Stanford-Wolverine clash at korian; Palo Alto. The idea sounded so good Morley we asked Cahn to do the same for ore The Daily. A similar story by Daily have m Sports Editor Ed Whipple ran this Stanfor week in the Stanford paper. Here's Garret how.a Stanford writer sees the touchdo game.)y Youchom By LARRY CA N out ofrs Stanford Daily Sports Edito Writers E STANFORD, California-It ap- junior fr pears that Chuck Taylor, Stan- nia, as t ford's 32-year-old grid boss, has Pacifici again come up with a sound ball club. It was last year that Taylor STAN] first took over as head man and which w with little material ended up in a bit str the Rose Bowl and was named the Wor Coach of the Year. Mathias. And now with only 21 lettermen threat at returning and key spot weaknesses, Cook an Taylor has Stanford folks asking, of ability "Just how good are the Indians?" Accor Tomorrow should provide the an- coaches swer, when the Indians play host wall is to your good Michigan squad. the one * * * the atti TO DATE STANFORD has won ary firs two games, sweeping Santa Clara game a off her feet with a second half with s surge to win, 28-13, and holding opener on to a stagger home a 14-13 win- played ner over Washington State. Both hand a of these clubs are tough. We have til this read with interest of the Wolver- Ticket ines' 27-13 defeat at the hands of interest Michigan State last week. But no ford Sta one is taken in by it as we have 90,000 sI also heard that Michigan State is the only just about as good as they come. week-en And we also respect your Big Ten thirty m no matter who we play-our last road ba( Rose Bowl game taught us that. dians a: Last year Stanford travelled to avenge1 Ann Arbor and edged the home hands o club, 23-13, with Gary Kerkorian as prove and Bill McColl carrying the at- first tw tack. Well, Gary and Bill are victory gone and are in pro ball, but all this. Team Yankees Er Raschi Gives Up Three Hits While Teammates Bag Ten ,en Series with 7-1 in e a boy out here by the of Bob Garrett who ap- very bit as good as Ker- and a pair of ends Sam and John Steinberg who ade it awfully tough for d's opponents to date. t has thrown to four wns and has completed 18 29 passes in two games. are already acclaiming the rom San Marino, Califor- he best passer ever in the Coast Conference. * * * FORD'S RUNNING game as weak last year is only ronger and is powered by ld's Greatest Athlete, Bob . Bob is a breakaway t any time. Halfbacks Ron nd Skip Cris show spurts y and brilliance. rding to Stanford line the Indians forward 20 per cent improved over e which crumpled before ack of Illinois last Janu- st. Tomorrow is the first at home for the Indians school in session. The against Santa Clara was here but with few on s classes didn't start un- Wednesday. sales have indicated vast in the game and Stan- adium with a capacity of hould be well filled. This is y game in the area this d as California, our rival iles to the North is on the ck in your locale. The In- re fired up and want to their last beating at the f a Big Ten squad as well to Stanford fans that the o wins were not flukes. A over Michigan would do SAME RESULTS? 'MI' Western Grid Treek Recalls 1902 Yost Trip (Continued from Page 1) After looking at a ball, he pickled Loes' second pitch into the seats about 360 feet away to break the game wide open with three more big runs. * * * THE ROOF almost caved in on Erskine in the fifth. There were Yanks on first and second with only one out. On a third ball to Phil Rizzuto that hit the plate and bounced from Campanella's mitt, Bauer started to run. Apparently he did not realize that Martin had not started to move. Consequently Martin was cut down easily at third by Campanel- la's peg to Billy Cox. * * * "LOPAT tomorrow," said Sten- gel. "Raschi was wonderful today. He doesn't look like a graceful pitcher but he has the stuff or he wouldn't have the record he has." Raschi, used to such details as World Series victories, took things in stride. * * * "TROUBLE?" he said. "I didn't have trouble. I walked three men in the second but they didn't score. It's when they score you have trouble." In the Dodger clubhouse, Manager Chuck Dressen ex- plained Erskine had fallen off a ladder in the clubhouse before the game, aggravating an old knee injury. The scene shifts to the big Yan- kee Stadium for today's third game with two lefthanders- Yankee Ed Lopat (10-5) and Dodger Preacher Roe (11-2)- slated to work. The teams will continue play at the stadium tomorrow and Sun- day, moving back to Brooklyn Monday and Tuesday if nobody has won four by that time. Rain fell on Yankee Stadium Thursday night but the weather man promised clearing weather for the third game of the World Series today. * * * Box Score NEW YORK AB R Bauer, rf 4 0 Rizzuto, ss 4 0 Mantle, cf 5 2 Woodling, if 4 1 Berra, c 3 0 Collins, lb 3 1 McDougald, 3b 3 2 Martin, 2b 4 1 Raschi, p 3 0 Totals 33 7 BROOKLYN (A) H PO 1 3 0 2 3 2 1 2 2 10 0 8 1 0 2 0 0 0 10 27 Al Cox, 3b 4 Reese, ss 3 Snider, of 4 Robinson, 2b 3 Campanella, C Pafko, if4 Hodges, lb 3 Furillo, rf3 Erskine, p 2 Loes, p0 Lehman, p 0 Totals 3 NEW YORK (A) BROOKLYN (N) B 4 3 4 3 4 4 3 2 0 R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (N) HI 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pa 1 3 1 3 7 2 9 2 0 0 0 A 0 2 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 7 A 0 5 0 3 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 A COUPLE OF SOUTHPAWS-Preacher Roe (left) and Eddie Lopat (right) will oppose each other on the Yankee Stadium mound in the third game of the World Series tomorrow. Brook- lyn and New York have won a game apiece. The Dodgers' Roe carries a 11-2 season record into the important contest, while Lopat won 10 and lost two during the campaign for the Yankees. Michigan To Receive $50,000 For Stanford Game TV Rights By DICK LEWIS Fifty years can make a big dif- ference. It was just five decades ago that the first of the fabulous point-a-minute teams of Fielding H. Yost entrained for the West Coast to inaugurate the Michigan- Stanford series that has its fifth renewal in Palo Alto tomorrow. THE OCCASION for the conflict was an invitation by Pasadena's Tournament of Roses, and the bases for the choice were such Wolverine immortals as Willie Heston, Neil Snow, Hugh White, Boss Weeks and Dan McGugin. These five, plus half a dozen others, had racked up 510 points while holding the opposition scoreless in a string of ten suc- cessive wins over the 1902 sea- son. Even with such a remarkable record, the Mid-Western invaders were given little chance of beat- ing the powerful Indians. Recog- nizing this, and realizing that the The Intramural Department needs officials for touch foot- ball. Those interested call the I-M Building at 8109 or con- tact Dick Dennis at 3-1616. Michigan aggregation consisted of a mere 15 football players, Yost suggested that the halves be shor- tened so the humiliation would not be too great. Stanford coach Ralph Fisher refused. * * * GAME TIME arrived, and the Maize and Blue eleven took the field before 8,000 fans. When the final whistle blew, the same eleven players trotted off the field with a lop-sided 49-0 slaughter of the cocky Indians. With the score 35-0 against him, Fisher suggested calling the game because of the gather- ing darkness and the fact that Stanford had run out of substi- tutes. The game was cut short ten minutes as Yost and his eleven iron men had the last laugh. Stanford put up a valiant fight before withering in the 85-degree heat. For 23 minutes it was a scoreless tie. Then the great Hes- ton took the ball on a fourth down naked reverse and carried 21 yards to the Indian eight. From there, Snow punched over with the first of his five touch- downs, a Rose Bowl standard that still exists today. Snow's scoring runs were for six, two, eight, 17 and four yards. Left end Curtis Redden added two more five pointers (touch- downs were worth only five points in those days), returning two punts 25 yards each. Right half Al Herrnstein scored the other TD, while right tackle Bruen Shorts kicked four extra points and Ev Sweeley booted a twenty-yard field goal in addi- tion to punting 21 times for a 39 yard average. All this action took place just fifty years ago. The immortal Heston and the merely mortal Sweeley will be watching this year's fracas from the relatively safe environs of the stands in sunny Palo Alto. L. 1 1 3 27 13 1 I-M BRIEFS -I 000 115 001 000 000-7 000-1 GRID SELECTIONS By NEIL BERNSTEIN The University of Michigan will receive $47,000 more this week for allowing its football team to ap- pear on television than it netted last Saturday for the same rights. Last week, the University re- ceived around $3,000 for their share of the television rights to the Michigan-MSC clash, and tomor- row they will get roughly $50,000 for the rights to the Wolverine clash with Stanford. * * * THIS IS ONE of the more in- teresting aspects of the NCAA's 1952 national-local program for televising this season's football games. Under the present plan, now in its third week of operation, one game will be videoed each Saturday on a coast-to-coast basis. Unlike the experimental program used last year, there will be no "blackout" areas this year, from which the televised game will be withheld. In addition to the game shown nationally which this week will be the Wolverine-Indian clash, lo- cal stations will be encouraged to substitute at least one game played in their area for the national game. This can only be done if the pro- posed local game is a sellout and the video does not conflict with any other grid clash in that area. THE BEST example of this lo- cal coverage was the Michigan- Spartan game, covered last Satur- day by a Detroit station only, which explains the difference in revenue between the school's share of the two Wolverine televisings. The nationally-viewed con- tests, eleven in all, will endeavor to represent the football in ev- ery section of the country and procure the best possible games. Also, no team will be televised in this manner more than once over the season. Although television profits from the 1952 schedule will go only to the colleges whose teams are in- volved in the series, a plan has been drawn up by the TV commit- tee for presentation to the next NCAA convention, whereby the profits from the video rights will be divided among all member col- leges. Another interesting aspect of to- morrow's game is the fact that the play-by-play announcer for this contest only will be former Michigan great Tom Harmon. There will be eight more tele- vised contests, in addition to the Wolverine tilt, including the MSC- Texas A&M contest next Satur- day and the Army-Navy game November 29. a Professional fraternity football play got underway yesterday with a full series of six tilts. The Law Club, last year's intra- mural football champions, began a successful defense of their title by downing Alpha Rho Chi, 27-0. The victors were clearly in com- mand of the situation all the way, as they outplayed their foes both on offense and defense and scored two touchdowns in each half. * * * * DAVE RAY was high scorer for the Barristers, with two touch- downs, one on a running play and the other on a long pass from Bob Cary. The other tallies were netted by Len Kravets and Frank Cory, Kravets scoring on a long end run and Cory by intercepting an Alpha Rho pass and crossing the goal. Phi Delta Phi took to the air to down an undermanned Alpha Kappa Psi squad, 34-0. The com- bination of Jim Cook passing to Don Lunt clicked for the Phi Delts, netting them a total of three touchdowns. JIM DICKERSON threw a long aerial to Jim Gault for the re- maining tally in the game. In a bruising defensive battle, Phi Rho Sigma edged out Alpha Omega, 7-0. After an evenly-con- tested battle for most of the game, a Phi Rho pass series brought the priC ball to the five yard line. Swift- footed Ken Averill took it over the goal line from there on a wide end sweep. The extra point was added by a flat pass from Averill to teammate Russell Howard. In other professional fraternity grid action, Phi Alpha Kappa downed Tau Epsilon Rho, 12-0, and Phi Delta Epsilon took the measure of Phi Delta Chi, 18-12. Delta Sigma Delta won its game by forfeit over the Air Force. Spartan Squad Starts Journey For Portland EAST LANSING (M)-Michigan State's football team left the cam- pus yesterday and was winging west to Oregon State for a Satur- day date with the Beavers at Port- land. THE SPARTANS bussed to De- troit where they boarded a plan at Willow Run. A brief workout was staged in Macklin Stadium in the early morning before the squad left the campus. Before he left, Coach Biggie Munn said there was a chance he might start Billy Wells, lead- ing ground-gainer against Michi- gan, at wingback in place of Pi- sano. 'I HAVEN'T MADE up my mind about it yet," Munn said. "Maybe we will start Wells but again it could just as easily be Pisano. He's a senior and a steady player and has never given us a bad per- formance at the position." Guard Frank Kush has been taking it easy this week because of an ankle sprain and a bad bruise on his hand but is expected to be able to start. FOR FUN AND RELAXATION .,. Golf Practice Range WE FURNISH CLUBS. OPEN 3:00-11:00 P.M. 31/2 miles east of Ann Arbor- out Washtenaw and one mile south on Milan Rd. (U.S.-23) or out Packard Rd. to Milan Rd. (U.S.-23). i L GAMES OF THE WEEK (Consensus Selections (10-3) Appear in Capitals) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. S. MICHIGAN at Stanford MICHIGAN ST. at Oregon St. CALIFORNIA at Minnesota Clemson at MARYLAND Iowa at INDIANA Colorado at KANSAS GEORGIA TECH at S. Metho. Purdue at OHIO STATE 9.Army at SOUTHERN CAL. 10. TENNESSEE at Duke 11. Vanderbilt at NORTH- WESTERN 12 UCLA at WASHINGTON 13. ILLINOIS at Wisconsin 14. Notre Dame at TEGAS 15. NAVY at Cornell / SELECTIONS BOB MARGOLIN (11-2-.846)-Stanford, MSC, California, Maryland, Indiana, Colorado, SMU, Purdue, USC, Duke, Northwestern, Wash- ington, Wisconsin, Texas Navy NEIL BERNSTEIN (11-2-.846)-Michigan, MSC, California, Mary- land, Indiana, Colorado, Georgia Tech, OSU, USC, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Washington, Illinois, Texas, Navy. ED WHIPPLE (10-3-.769)-Michigan, MSC, California, Maryland, In- diana, Kansas, Georgia Tech, OSU, USC, Duke, Northwestern, UCLA, Illinois, Notre Dame, Navy JOHN JENKS (10-3-.769)-Michigan, MSC, California, Maryland, Indiana, Kansas, Georgia Tech, OSU, USC, Tennessee, North- western, Washington, Illinois, Texas, Navy DICK LEWIS (10-3-769)-Michigan, MSC, California, Maryland, Indiana, Kansas,'Georgia Tech, OSU, USC, Tennessee, North- western, UCLA, Illinois, Texas, Navy IVAN KAYE (10-3-.769) - Michigan, MSC, California, Maryland, In- diana, Kansas, Georgia Tech, OSU, USC, Tennessee, Northwestern, UCLA, Illinois, Texas, Navy. , PAUL GREENBERG (10-3-.769)-Michigan, MSC, California, Mary- land, Indiana, Kansas, Georgia Tech, Purdue, USC, Duke, North- western, Washington, Illinois, Notre Dame, Navy ED SMITH (9-4-.692)I-Michigan, MSC, California, Maryland, Indi- ana, Kansas, Georgia Tech, OSU, USC, Tennessee, Northwestern, Washington, Illinois, Texas, Navy DICK SEWELL (8-5-.615)-Michigan, MSC, California, Maryland, Indiana, Kansas, Georgia Tech, OSU, USC, Tennessee, North- western, Washington, Illinois, Texas, Navy ,4) Are You Eligible? DANCING Friday and Saturday Nites Dancing Saturday Afternoon after the game. Members and Guests 314 E. Liberty St. V1? g) Ph. 2-3972 C UYou Must Be 21 RENTALS & BANQUETS c.,e If DON BAILEY Your Singing Host -HALL! IT WENT OUT WITH RACCOON COATS and on quality, comfort and casualness. rumble seats. And we say good Like this button-down Oxford riddance. with just the proper roll to the Today's college man doesn't die collar. Or this fine white piqui with a thousand deaths when the school an eyelet tab collar with just the loses the big game. And his clothes right degree of difference. are no longer flashy, fancy and We understand the modern col- gaudy. lege man. We concentrate our For his apparel, he looks to efforts, not on fads, but on making Manhattan" to reflect his quiet, self- a better shirt. Ask for Manhattan assured manner ... his insistence ... and you'll see how true this is. 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