WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Re nolds Faces Black tn world Series Opener Wolverines Stress Pass Defense During-Practice Old Knee Injury Sidelines Frank Howell; Freshman Tony Branoff May Fill Position Yanks Eye Fourth Straight Championship NEW YORK - OP) -The ever- winning New York Yankees open their bid for a fourth straight world championship behind Allie * * * Pass defense and Frank Howell's injury drew most of the attention at the Wolverine football team's light workout session yesterday. The anti-aircraft batteries were drilled steadily to try to correct the weakness that crippled the team against Michigan State. HOWELL, the speedy back who had looked so fine in all pre-season workouts and was selected as "Michigan Player of the Week" by visiting newspapermen last Sat- 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. --Rod Grambean urday, agravated an old knee in- jury in the game against Michi- gan State and stafed out of -uni- form today. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan said that Howell's injury was worse than at first thought and that he was not sure whether or not he would be able to make the trip to Stanford on Thursday. He is taking heat treatments on the recalcitrant knee and hop- ing for a miracle. The right-halfback picture is further darkened by injuries to the number one and number two reserves. Ton Witherspoon pulled a leg muscle on Monday and Don Oldham suffered a back injury against State, so neither of them are expected to be up to snuff. It appears now that the major brunt of the wing-backing will be taken up by Tony Branoff, the hard- running freshman sensation from Flint. ASIDE FROM pass defense, the squad worked out in a light dummy scrimmage and signal drills to sharpen the offense preparatory to Saturday's meeting with the In- dians at Palo Alto. The freshman team, with 100 anxious neophytes reporting to Coach Wally Weber and' his as- sistant Cliff Keen, moved into its sixth day of practice, with the squad just beginning to take shape. Ed Johnson, older broth- er of Tom, Michigan's great tackle of last year, is one of the most impressive new gridders. Johnson'is a beefy 230 and runs out of the fullback slot. The turnout is one of the larg- est that Weber has had in re- cent years, and most of the young- sters are large and talented, whichj augurs well for a strong freshman squad. In keeping with the trend of modern football, offense has taken the major emphasis in the preliminary drills with a lot of time being spent by the coaching staff acquainting the freshmen with the Michigan brand of the single wing. Reynolds today at Ebbetts field with Manager Casey Stengel still mulling over his batting order to face Joe Black, Brooklyn's bril- liant relief pitcher. Doubt about the condition of Gene Woodling is the reason for Stengel's reluctance to give out a batting order. Woodling, bothered by a pulled leg muscle, insists he will be fit and ready to take over his left field job. Stengel wants to be "sure Gene can run before he makes a move. * * * BY THE TIME the 32,000 pay- ing customers have taken their seats and millions of radio and television fans have huddled around their sets, Stengel will havedelivered the lineup into the hands of plate umpire Babe Pi- nelli. Game time is 1 p.m. The Yanks' blazing World Series record of 14-4 and the Dodgers' dreary showing of 0-5 helped the oddmakers install the American League as strong 8 to 5 favorites. Reynolds was a little better than 6 to 5 to beat Black in the opener at Eb- betts Field in the best-of-seven series. Reynolds, 20-8, an old hand at this World Series business with his first 20-win season behind him, was facing a 28-year-old rookie who started only two games all season. But Black 15-4, a strong- armed Negro, appeared in 56 games as the Dodgers' bullpen ace OFFENSIVE SPARKPLI in their struggle to win the Na- tional League pennant. * * * MANAGER Chuck Dressen of the Brooks announced his regu- lar lineup including Carl Furillo in right field. Fudillo has been a doubtful starter because of a pain- fully injured left hand. The Dodgers pack plenty of power in the bats of cleanup man Jackie Robinson, Roy Cam- panella, Gil Hodges, Andy Paf- ko and Duke Snider. Both clubs worked out yesterday at Yankee Stadium. ** * Kappa Sigs Top Chi Phi In I=MTilt Betas, Sammies Cop Fraternity Openers Ageless grid rivalries were re- newed yesterday afternoon on Fer- ry Field as twenty houses knocked the proverbial "lid" off another fraternity football season. The hurling arms of Tom Case and Don Mitchell gave the Kap- pa Sigs a big lift as they dumped Chi Phi 19-13. * * * MITCHELL hit Rad Fisher ear- ly in the first period with a short toss in the end zone to give Kap- pa Sigma the first touchdown of the game. Then, after Chi Phi had knot- ted the score at 6-6 on a pass from Lee Krumbholz to Dave Sebold, Case unleashed a pair of long heaves to Mitchell and Chuck Heimerdinger to put the Kappa Sigs in front for good. The Chi Phi's added their final TD late in the game on another pass from Krumbholz, this time to Jim Howell. By PAUL GREENBERG "Sophomore quarterback Jim Haluska passed for three touch- downs and scored another as he led Wisconsin's football team to a brutal 42-19 victory over Mar- quette Saturday." So read the Daily's brief synop- sis of the Badger's opening day triumph at Madison, but there is a story between the lines that touches the Michigan sports scene very closely. THIS SAME Haluska, who con- nected on 14 of 21 aerials for 237 yards, played his freshman foot- ball right here in Ann Arbor in 1950. However he was hobbled by injuries and showed up at prac- tice just enough times to get credit for the football coaching course he was taking in the School of Physical Education. The stocky six-footer also won freshman numerals in basketball and baseball and was considered by his coaches as one of the finest natural athletes ever to matricu- late at Michigan. r FORMER 'M' FRESHMAN: Sophomore Quarterback Key to Badgers' Chances HALUSKA is a native Badger, hailing from Racine, the same town that sent the Peterson broth- ers, Don, and Tom, to Michigan and football fame. He didn't col- pete in varsity sports last year, but; now back in the familiar en- virons of his home state where he led his. high school team to the state parochial championship in 1949, Haluska has found a place for himself on the gridiron. He moves into the quarter- backing slot vacated by the grad- uation of the slick-passing John- ny Coatta, quite a move for a lad who passed up spring foot- ball practice at Michigan to play shortstop on the frosh baseball team. Teamed with h'alfbacks Gerry Witt and Harland Carl and Full- back Alan "The Horse" Ameche, Haluska gives Wisconsin what many experts consider to be the best backfield in the Big Ten, good enough to make the Badgers co- favorites in the conferenc6 race with Illinois, last year's title hold- ers. .. . - . i Posture Foundation B. Goodrich Basketball Shoes Many coaches specify B. F. Goodrich "P-F" Basketball Shoes for their players be- cause they know fast ames take fast footwork. "P-F is a scientific device that guards against flat feet and tired leg muscles ... gives you more "staying power. ALLIE REYNOLDS * . . 20-game winner * * * WORLD SERIES FACTS By The Associated Press Probable Lineups YANKS DODGERS Rizzuto ss Cox 3b Collins lb Reese ss Mantle of Snider of Woodling If Robinson 2b Berra c Campanella c Bauer rf Pafko If McDougald 3b Hodges lb Martin 2b Furillo rf Reynolds p Black p Umpires - Pinelli NL plate; Passarella AL first base; Goetz NL second base; McKinley AL third base. Foul lines-Boggess NL and Honochick AL. First game-At Ebbetts' Field, Brooklyn, today. Second game-At Ebbetts' Field, Brooklyn, Thursday. Third game-At Yankee Sta- dium, New York, Friday. Fourth game-At Yankee Sta- dium, New York, Saturday. Fifth game if necessary - At Yankee Stadium, New York, Sun- day. Sixth game if necessary -- At Ebbetts' Field, Brooklyn, Monday. Seventh game if necessary- At Ebbetts' Field, Brooklyn, Tuesday. - Game times-Noon. CST for all except Sunday. Sunday starting time is 1:05 p.m. CST. Seating capacity-Ebbetts' Field, 33,000; Yankee Stadium, 69,000. Radio broadcast -- Mutual. Television -- NBC. Series odds-Yankees 8-5. First game odds-Yankees 6-5. First game starting pitchers -- Joe Black 15-4 for Brooklyn; Allie Reynolds 20-8 for New York. Last year's winners-Yankees defeated Giants in six games. World Series standings-Ameri- can 31 champions; National 17. World Series records of partici- pants - Yankees 14-4; Brooklyn 0-5. JOE BLACK . . . star reliefer Howell's Running Earns Player of the Week Tag Frank Howell, fleet Wolverine wingback, was named Michigan Player of the Week by the press box experts for his outstanding offensive play in Saturday's 27-13 losing effort against Michigan State. Billy Wells, Howell's counter- part on the Michigan State line- up, received the same honor for his continued success in outracing the Wolverine defensive platoon. HOWELL was the sparkplug of the Michigan running attack, gaining 106 yards in 16 tries for an unofficial average of 7.6 yards per carry. His effectiveness on the ground is more apparent when compared tb the total Michigan rushing record-161 yards gain- ed in 38 tries, a 4.3 average. Midway in . the first quarter Howell carried the mail in one of a series of plays that led to the first Michigan touchdown. His four yard reverse set the stage for Ted Kress to counter the first six pointer of the day from the five yard line. ** * THE REVERSE worked well for Howell all afternoon. Early in the second quarter he scampered 24 yards to place the pigskin in threatening position on the Spar- tan 23. However, two plays later he fumbled on the State 15 to spoil a scoring opportunity. Again, early in the second half, he raced 24 yards to the State 20 yard line, but this time a 15 yard clipping penalty nulli- fied the gain and took the guts out of another Michigan scor- ing chance. In addition to his work on the first string backfield, the Muske- gon senior also saw action with the defensive unit, sharing the safety position with Lowell Perry. Unfortunately for the Wolver- ine eleven, an old knee injury came back to plague him late in the game and he may not see action against Stanford this Sat- urday. ichigan State Leads AP Poll NEW YORK - (/P) - Michigan State's mighty Spartans, who have established a come-from-behind pattern of winning their football games, are the front-runners in the Associated Press football poll. Others in the first ten this week were California, Texas, Georgia Tech, Southern Cali- fornia, Wisconsin, Kansas and Duke. The second.ten: Tennaes- see, Villanova, Princeton, UCLA, Ohio State, Virginia, Rice, Mis- sissippi, Notre Dame and Okla- homa. A heavy schedule this week in- dicates that further changes in the rankings may be in order after Saturday's tussles., BETA THETA PI ran highest score of the day trampled Triangle, 32-0. up the as they The passing combination of Dick Fisher to Terry Iverson, which clicked for three touch- downs, was the big gun in the furious Beta offense. The other scores came on a twenty-yard sweep around right end by Mac Hurry and a pass in- terception by Tom Trimble, who snatched the pigskin on the Tri- angle 15-yard stripe and raced un- touched across the goal line. SIGMA ALPHA MU'S Warren Werthheimer hurled three touch- down passes to give his team a 20- 2 win over Delta Tau Delta. Wertheimer, who ended the game with a record of eight completions out of 12 tosses, pitched to big Paul Groffsky for two touchdowns and hit Marc Jacobson for the other six-pointer. The Delt's picked up their two points on a safety when Al Wolin of Sigma Alpha Mu was touched behind his own goal line after he had intercepted a pass. In one of the closest battles of the afternoon Alpha Tau Omega, last year's grid champs, edged Alpha Delta Phi in over- time, 14-13. With the score tied, 13-13, at the end of regulation play, ATO out- gained the Alpha Delts in the ex- tra period, giving them one point and a hard-earned victory. Other scores: Delta Upsilon 19; sigma Nu 6 Sig Eps 26; Phi Kappa sigma 0 Delta Sigma 7; Zeta Psi 6 ZBT 2; Sigma Phi 0 AE Pi 1; Phi Sig Kappa 0 Psi U 6; Phi Sig 0 RESIDENCE HALLS Reeves 13; Lloyd 12 (Overtime) WinchelI 14; Kelsey 13 (Overtime) B. F. Goodrich "P-F" Basketball Shoes feel right the first time you try 'em on, and keep on feeling right every time you wear 'em. Come in today ... Select yours from our wide range of sizes. MANDAN $4.95 LITENFAST $7.50 HAROL.OS. TRICK 711 N. University, Ph. 6915 902 S. 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