PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1954 ' PAGE TWO THE 1~flCUhIiAl DAILY SATURDAY, APRIL 17. 1954 ( C4NHAM ENTERS 35 MEN: l' Thinclads Compete in Ohio Relays Broncos Drop "'M' Diamondmen, 7-3 Soph Hurler Fouchey Limits Losers By HAP ATHERTON Just back last week from a suc-t cessful trip to the west coast,' Michigan track coach Don Can- barn's squad left for Columbus,r Ohio, yesterday to face 16 other colleges and universities in the an-1 nual Ohio Relays at Ohio Stadiumf this afternoon. Michigan, Illinois, Michiganx State, Purdue, Wisconsin, and Ohio State will represent the Big Ten in the events. Penn State will head the list of other notable squads to compete. Altogether, there will be more than 350 ath- letes entered in the meet. * * Ae COACH Canham's entries, num- bering 35, will be the largest num- ber entered from any school. In- cluded in the squad will be star relay men Jack Carroll and Grant Scruggs, ace high jumpers Mark Booth and Milt Mead, and captain Roland "Fritz" Nilsson, who is the Big Ten shot put and discus cham- pion. The events that most of the teams are entering their best men in are the 880 yard relay, the distance medley, and the mile relay. Michigan has Bill Barton, Peter Gray, John Moule, and John Ross in the distance medley. In the 880 yard relay, Canham has appointed John STONIGHT LAST PERFORMANCE The U of M Gilbert & Sullivan Society Presents "THESPIS" and "THE SO CEDER" Curtain Rises at 8:00 P.M. sharp Tickets 90c and $1 .20 Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office open 9 A.M. till Curtain Now! Week-day Orpheum Mats 70c Now! Sun. & Eves. 90c ,.. "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR I" -Nat'lBd. of Review NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARD! M-G-M's VIOLENCE! IU . TYRANNY! PASSION! STARMtNO MARLON JAMES JOHN BRANDO " MASON * GlELGUD LOUIS EDMOND CALHERN O'BRIEN AND GREER GARSON* DEBORAN KERR 3 - tiz c.. o uy JOSEPH L. MANKIEWICZ' p,@p;o Eo ueJOHN HOUSEMAN AN .64- PICTURE Features at -3:00-5:00--7:00--9:00 ""--"" llfl i{I Vallortigara, Carroll, Dave Hess- ler, and Scruggs to carry the ba- ton. Coach Canham has changed one man on the mile relay team that won the Chicago Daily News ti- tle. The mile relay team is com- posed of Dave Hessler, Bob Rudi- sell, Carroll, and Scruggs. On the western trip, this same relay team ran the event in 3:16 against UCLA for one of the fastest out- door times this year. . * * * THE MAIN contenders in these events are Michigan, Penn State, Illinois, and Indiana. Illinois, which captured the Big Ten In- door and Outdoor Championship last year and the indoor cham- pionship this year is especially to be feared. Penn State and Indiana are expected to give Michigan the most competition in distance med- ley while Penn State and Illinois should be troublesome in the 180 yard event. All three are entering excellent teams in the mile relay. In the two mile relay'event Canham has placed John Ross, John Moule, Roy Christiansen, and Pete Gray. This quartet posted a time of 7:35 this year at the Chicago Daily News Re- lays to set a new meet record and become the fastest indoor two mile relay team in the na- tion. Earlier the same team set the high indoor season mark in 3:29.3 at Cleveland, Ohio. Nilsson, who has thrown the 16 pound shot 55 feet, 9 inches, hurled it 55 feet, 4 inch on the western trip to prove he's in fine shape for the Ohio trip. He will be assistpd by Rumsell in the shot putting department, and by Roy Pella in the discus event. Booth who stands five feet, eight inches in height, has cleared the high jump bar at almost a foot over his own height and will be a pow- erful threat from Michigan. He must face, however, Ron Mitchell of Illinois who captured the Big Ten crown in the event. * * * AL LUBINA, Bob Hall, Jack Cle- ments, George Lynch, and Ron Wallingford will compete in the mile run for Michigan. They will compete against the highly favored Len Truex, former Ohio State star who will run unattached. Roger Maugh, John Hilberry, and Robert Appleman will rep- resent Michigan in the pole vault. Maugh has cleared the bar at 13 feet. Footballer Tom Hen- ricks and Bill Michaels, who have both leaped over 22 feet, will compete in the broad jump. Geoffrey Dooley, who has run on several winning two mile relay teams will carry Michigan's ban- ner in the 600-yard run, and Jim Love will lead off for Michigan in the 300-yard run. As a sophomore, Love ran the fastest low hurdles time in Michigan history, :23.4. Michigan has entered no one in the one and a half mile run, the high hurdles, and the 100-yard sprint. * * * NO TEAM scores are kept at the Ohio Relays, but Coach Can- ham feels that it is an excellent way to find out where to place the man on the team. He stated that the experience gained in the Ohio Relays will condition the thinclads for the Penn Relays coming up next week. COLLEGE BASEBALL Wisconsin 26, Bradley 3 Northwestern 17, Navy Pier 11 Iowa State 2, Minnesota 1 ; ' s:>: : : ;> ,. y+ , :,A 1:00 - :::: -0 . ::. :. CinemaS juiI presents To Four Safeties Special to The Daily KALAMAZOO-Western Michi- gan broke up a tight pitching dual with six runs in the eighth inning here yesterday afternoon to pick up its second winof the week over the Wolverine nine. The rash of runs gave hurler Ed Fouchey and his Bronco mates a 7-3 victory to add to the 4-1 tri- umph they chalked up over the Maize and Blue in Ann Arbor Tuesday. * * * THE SOPHOMORE righthand- er limited the Wolverines to four safeties, half of them coming in the opening frame when the los- ers pushed across a pair of runs. Michigan starter Mary Wis- niewski held Western in check until the seventh, when the Broncos started things rolling with' a single tally and then sewed the ball game up in the disastrous eighth. Southpaw Wisniewski didn't is- sue a walk until the seventh, but gave up four free passes before the final two innings were over.' WITH MICHIGAN holding a 3-1 lead, Al Nagel and Ron Jack- son opened the Bronco half of Thrown Again Michigan AB R H Lepley, rf ...............4 1 0 Ronan,2b.............3 0 0 Tommelein, cf ..........5 0 0 Eaddy, 3b..............3 2 1 Corbett, lb...............3 0 2 Branoff, if..............2 0 0 B. Leach, If ............1 0 0 Benedict, ss .............3 0 0 D. Leach, a............3 0 0 Wisniewski, p...........4 0 1 Kuchka* ................ 1 0 0 Totals...............32 3 4 *Popped up for Branoff in sixth Western Michigan ....AB R H Lajoe, ci............... 4 1 1 Heaviland, 3b ...........4 0 1 Nagel, If.,...............5 1 1 Jackson, lb...............5 1 1 Emaar, c.................4 0 1 Johnson, rf...............4 2 2 O'Connell, ss ...........3 1 1 Stevenson, 2b ...........3 0 0 Fouchey, p .............4 1 , 1 Totals ................36 7 9 * * * Michigan ....200 000 010-3 4 3 West. Mich. .000 000 16x-7 9 3 the eighth with hits. Duane Emaar slashed what looked like a double play ball to Moby Bene- dict at short, but second sacker Frank Ronan dr6pped the toss and the bases were loaded. Lowell Johnson then lofted one to left that Bob Leach couldn't quite hold on to, with one man crossing the plate on the play. After Jerry O'Connell had walk- ed to force the tying run in, Wis- niewski settled down long enough to strike out Jim Stevenson and get Fouchey to hit into a force play at the plate. * * * BUT THEN centerfielder Bill Sportsquick COLUMBUS, Ohio-(P)-Olym- pie hurdles champion Harrison Dillard announced yesterday he will not compete in today's Ohio Relays. The former Baldwin-Wallace College star wired officials he had injured his back Thursday while training and would not take part in the 24-event program. * . * * PHILADELPHIA- () -H. Roy Hamey, recently assistant general manager of the New York Yankees and former general manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates, was picked by the Philadelphia Phillies yesterday as their first general manager in more than six years. SPORTS KEN COPP Night Editor TODAY thru Sunday Gee >ut is Great, WALKI - BACKR DO R O'CONNoR at Kalamazoo Tilt Lajoie lashed a single to right driving in two runs, and when the throw-in got past catcher Dick Leach, Fouchey scored from first while Lajoie went all the way to third, from where he counted the final tally a moment later on a passed ball. The Wolverines started things off in a big way when they rak- ed Fouchey for a pair of hits good for two runs in their first turn at bat. Leadoff man Paul Lepley reach- ed base on an infield error, and was immediately sacrificed to sec- ond by Ronan. * * * AFTER Howard Tommelein had registered the first out, Don Ead- dy singled thru short to send Lep - ley across with the first run, and scored a moment later when Jack Corbett blasted a long triple, Michigan registered its final tally in the seventh without the aid of a hit. Eaddy was hit by a pitched ball, advanced to third on an infield error and an interference play called on the catcher, and scored on Benedict's infield out. THE BRONCOS pushed across their initial run in the seventh when Johnson led off with a triple and came home on O'Connell's long fly. With both hurlers going the distance, Fouchey struck out ten men and walked five in his nine inning stint, while Wis- niewski ousted seven on strikes while giving up four passes. Western outhit the Wolverines 9-4. Every man in the Bronco line- up but second baseman Stevenson hit safely, with rightfielder John- son the only one to solve Wis- niewski's offerings more than once. Firstbaseman Corbett led the Wolverines at the plate with a pair of hits, including his three- bagger. Coach Ray Fisher's crew will play its fourteenth game in the last sixteen days this afternoon when they meet Toledo University at Toledo. The Wolverine mentor has in- dicated that he will use both Cor- bett and Jack Ritter on the mound. MICHIGAN DAILY Phone NO 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .60 1.34 1.46 3 .70 1.78 2.94 4 .90 2.24 3.92 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.:M. doily. LOST AND FOUND FOUND IN STREET-Sum of money. In Lost and Found at Administration Bldg. Can be had upon proper de- scription. Pay for ad! )132A FOR SALE 1946 PLYMOUTH BUSINESS COUPE-- Radio and heater and new tires. Ex- cellent motor. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588. )407B ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Box, 39c; shorts, 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )14B A MEDIUM blue-grey gabardine suit. Single breasted, sport style. Like new, size 40 regular. Very reasonably pric- ed. Call NO 3-1904 after 8 p.m. on weekdays only. 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