TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1952 rr , s PASS THE CRYING TOWEL: Graduation Vacancies Bother Munn l t. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Green Walks in Footsteps A 1AiYo4'&YO Of Former Grid Captains Wolverine Senior Shines at Defensive End; Respected by Opponents, Teammates Alike T ----°- By IVAN KAYE The Associated Press' pre-sea- son poll of the nation's sports- writers shows the Spartans of Michigan State College at the top of the list. Biggie Munn would be a lot happier if the survey had never 'been taken. The rotund Spartan mentor finds it rather difficult to wave the crying towel in front of the very sportswriters who ac- corded his squad top honors even before the first kickoff. * * * COACH MUNN, contrary to the ideas of some of East Lansing's more rabid fandom, will still have to put eleven men on the field, and therein lay several problems. For one, there is no Don Cole- man on the 1952 squad. For an- other, the great Al Dorow to Bob Carey pass combine has joined the ranks of the alumni. Pressing as these vacancies are, no one up in Lansing is losing sleep over them. It looks as though stocky Gordon Serr is going to take over Coleman's old spot, while Tom Yewcic and ham-handed Paul Dekker will team up to pace the aerial at- tack. Undoubtedly Michigan State's greatest strong point 'is its wealth k\/V TYPEl i of hard-running backs. Men of the caliber of Captain Don Mc- Auliffe, Vince Pisano, Dick Panin, Wayne Benson, Evan Slonac, Le- Roy Bolden and Billy Wells give the Spartans a seasoned core of power runners around which to fashion an offense. * * * THE FIRST STRING offensive line will probably have Dekker and Doug Bobo at ends, Serr and Joe Klein at tackles, Bob Breniff and Frank Kush at guards, and All-American candidate Dick Tam- buro of New Kensington, Penn- sylvania at center. While this is admittedly a good forward wall, it still does not measure up to last year's front line. Several of the start- ers are defensive specialists who did not play at all last year when the Spartans held the ball. Kush, Klein, Serr and Tam- buro are primarily defenders and may be forced to play both ways this season. This will be the opening game for both teams. Unlike last year and the year before, the Spartans will not have had the chance to play together before going against the. Maize and Blue. * * * IN 1950, the Green and White opeIned by blasting Oregon State 38-13, and then came down to Ann Arbor to upset Michigan 14-7. Last season they opened against Oregon State and after beating the coast team 6-0 came into Michigan Stadium and dealt the Wolverines a stunning 25-0 defeat. The advantages of having a game under their belts paid off in spades for the lads from Lan- sing on both occasions. Both times it was Michigan which made the usual opening day mistakes, and the Spartans were there to capitalize on them. State had made their own mis- takes against Oregon State, and when they came into Michigan Stadium the "kinks" had all been ironed out. I MERRITT GREEN . . . scholarly captain Mi~saFain 'old Narrow BattingLead NEW YORK-(/P)-Stan Musial and Ferris Fain, the major league btting leaders during most of the 3152 season, are being hard press- es. to hold their slight advantages as , the campaign enters its final wi ek. With only six games left in w hich to maintain his edge, Mu- si al has a meager four point lead o0 er Chicago's Frankie Baumholtz in the National League. The St. Louis Cardinal stalwart dropped lxw? valuable points last week and fe ll to .334 while Baumholtz put on a five point spurt to .330. * * * IN THE AMERICAN League, P in's .328 mark is also four points be tter than his closest pursuer, page Mitchell of the Cleveland ' £ ians. Cincinnatti's Ted Kluszewski is in third place in the National .League with a .318 mark. Red Schoendienst of St. Louis An d Brooklyn's Jackie Robinson a: re deadlocked for fourth at .308. * * * GENE WOODLING, although 'hip tailed off six points to .314, con- tilmes in third position in the ALn'erican League. Boston's George Kell, another invalid, holds down fourth at x.311. Hank Sauer, with 37 home runs tn'd 121 runs batted in, is still the g ttional League top man in those Sapartments. Luke Easter and Larry Doby of C leveland are tied for the Ameri-j E in League lead in homers withj 3. each while teammate Al Rosen h2 ts driven in the most runs, 101. Philadelphia's Bobby Shantz, vwk h 24 victories and seven set- backs for a .774 mark, paces the American League pitchers. Preach- er Roe, Brooklyn's veteran south- .paw, heads the National League jwsith 11 triumphs and only two redefeats, an .846 average. By PAUL GREENBERG The line in the score card says simply Merritt Green III, end, 6.0, 180, 21, Senior, Toledo, Ohio. In one line of agate type the agile, rugged captain of the 1952 edition of Coach Bennie Ooster- baan's grid machine is introduced to the public. It does not come close to doing him justice. SOME ATHLETES can be de- scribed by facts and figures, sta- tistics and averages, but "Tim" Green is not one of them. He is not the man who, in these days of offense-minded football, grabs the headlines. If adjectives were em- ployed to describe him, they would be "hustling and inspirational"- the qualities that have earned him the honor of being selected as leader of the Wolverine football team. Green is a team man, the pro- verbial "player's player" well- liked by his teammates and coaches and respected by op- ponents. He came from no- where to win the Meyer Morton Trophy for the most improved player in spring practice of 1951, and has been a standout per- former ever since. Playing in a league long noted for power and size, Tim has often come up against men outweighing him by up to forty pounds and still he is feared by the opposition as a rugged man to deal with. Last year he and Russ Osterman teamed as a pair of defensive ends comparable with any in the na- tion. IN '52 TIM will be joined by the massive Gene Knutson, a worthy substitute for Osterman. If the rest of the Michigan squad were as strong as the defensive end spots, Coach Oosterbaan and his hard-working staff could breathe a lot more easily. Green doesn't look like the "typical football player"-as if anyone does. He is strikingly good looking and although well constructed physically, his horn- ed-rimmed glassed give him a scholarly appearance. He is also a polished speaker with the ability to captivate and completely win over audiences, a gift that Tim probably picked up from his father, a prominent To- ledo attorney. * . * SAD TO SAY for the coeds, Tim's Greek god profile is no long- er up for the claiming. It seems that a while back he met Ann Arino and liked her so much that he decided to make the relation- ship permanent. The Greens now number four after the addition of Sue, 15 months, and Terry, 22 years. SAVE AT SAM'S STORE li ®® M MEN! IT PAYS to buy Better Grade S OESE f especially at our LOWER FALL PRICES. Florsheims - Bostonians - Weyenbergs Special for College Opening ... 10 NEW FALL STYLES REDUCED TO 11.95 and 9.95 I CAMPUS BOOTERY ... SO. STATE ST. "STEP INTO OUR SHOES AND GO PLACES" Not I But 4 Guarantees stand Back of every STYLE-MART SUIT THE GREATEST CLOTHING VALUE IN AMERICA TODAY! SUITS $4950 come in and see the selection of patterns. 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