THE MCHIGAN DAILY MAY, MAY 10, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. MAY 10. 1957 p~. , Wolverines S uccumb to Irish, 14-0 P Notre Dame Hurler Tames 'M' Bats with Three-Hitter .v i -Daily-David Arnold DETERMINATION - Wolverine sprint specialist John Mag- nuson spends three hours each spring afternoon in preparation for meets such as the one at Illinois tomorrow. Magnuson has just recently returned to action after pulling a leg muscle last month. -Daily-Charles Curtiss JIM VUKOVICH ... a hit in vain By BRUCE BENNETT Special to The Daily SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Notre Dame exploded for ten runs in the first inning here yesterday and went on to score a one-sided 14-0 victory over Michigan in a game called after 51/2 innings be- cause of rain. The Wolverines are in Lafay- ette, Ind., today and will resume their regular Big Ten schedule in a game with Purdue this aft- ernoon. They move on to Illi- nois for a doubleheader tomorrow. Problems Ahead After yesterday's fiasco, coach Ray Fisher is undecided as to whom he will send to the mound against the Boilermakers. He ex- pects his team will be facing Ron Teunis, a clever southpaw, who defeated the Wolverines in Ann Arbor last year. Three Wolverine hurlers-Bob Sealby, Bob Stabrylla, and Don Poloskey - took their lumps at the hands of the Irish. Sealby started, but didn't retire a man. Bad Start Jim Duffy cracked his first pitch for a homerun to deep right- center field. After two walks, El- mer Kohorst rapped a solid dou- ble, scoring two runs. Bob Giarrantano tapped back to Sealby, but the pitcher fumbled the ball and then threw past first baseman Jim Vukovich, permitting Kohorst to score. Stabrylla took over at this point and the Irish combed him for six more runs and four hits- one a homerun by Ed Hurley. Poloskey Relieves Poloskey started the second in- ning and went the rest of the way giving up ten hits and four runs. Michigan's cause wasn't helped by four fielding errors. Meanwhile, Chuck Symeon cooled the usually hot Michigan bats with three scattered singles- one in the second by Vukovich, another in the third by Ernie My- ers, and one by Poloskey in the fifth. Dies on Third Only one Wolverine reached third base. Steve Boros walked with one out- in the. fourth and went to second on an infield out. He moved to third on an error, but died there when Sigman flied out to center field. Symeon walked only one and struck out four. The Michigan delegation walked four and struck out the same number. Fisher's pitching staff will have to come up with a better per- formance against Purdue today. The Boilermakers are lead at the plate by Bill Gorman and Ron Osucha. In their only three con- ference games Gorman is hitting .583 including two doubles, while Oschua is hitting .455 including a home run. Irish Up! MICHIGAN AB R H RBI E Myers, 3b 4 0 1 0 0 Fox, If 3 0 0 0 0 Tippery, 2b 3 0 0 0 1 Boros ss 2 00 0 1 Herrnstein, cf 3 0 0 0.0 Vukovich, lb 2 0 1 0 0 Sigman, rf 2 0 0 0 1 Dickey, c 2 0:0 0 0 Stabrylla, p 0 0 0 0 0 Poloskey, p 2 0 1' 0 1 Sealby, p 0 0 0 0 1 TOTALS ,19 0 3 0 5 NOTRE DAME AB R H RBI E Duffy, of 3 3 2 3 0 Hurley, 2b 3 2 2 3 0 Cusack, lb 3 1 2 0 0 Kohorst, c 4 1 2 3 0 Glarrantano, rf 4 1 1 0 0 Carideo, ss 4 012 0 0 Senecal, if 4 2 2 1 0 Johnson, 3b 4 3 3 1 0 Symeon, p 311 0 0 TOTALS 32 14 16 11 0 NOTRE DAME 1020 llx--14 16 0 MICHIGAN 000 000- 0 3 4 BIG TEN TENNIS Indiana 4, Michigan State 2 COLLEGE BASEBALL Butler 9, DePauw 6 Me. JOHN By DAVE LYON It looks like John Magnuson's determination and hard work are beginning to ply off. The Michigan sophomore, at 57' and 145 lbs, one of the small- est sprinters on Coach Don Can- ham's track team, has come into his own during his brief Varsity career. After he had climaxed the past indoor season with a fourth place in the Big Ten 100-yard dash and a second place in the same event at the Michigan State Relays, Magnuson pulled a leg muscle after the season's first outdoor meet at Quantico, Va. Recovers Soon After being inactive two weeks, he recovered sufficiently to com- pete in last week's Marquette- Western Michigan-Michigan meet, in which he placed third behind Western's Ira Murchison and the Wolverines' Jim Pace, two of the Middle- West's faster 100-yard runners. Magnuson began his track ca- reer early, winhing a junior high letter. "But I didn't begin to take track seriously until my junior year," he relates. The result of this change in his attitude was apparent, in his sophomore year in high school,he had been run- ning the 100 in :11. The follow- ing year he was doing it in :10.2. Magnuson spends three hours every afternoon practicing at Fer- ry Field. "You don't realize how much time you spend there until you don't go down one day." he says. Snappy Practice He prefers short and snappy practice sessions to long, drawn- out ones. "Two 220's at :20.2 are better than six 220's at :20.6. The coach isn't interested in how many you can run - it's how fast you can run one that counts." He emphasizes mental condi- tioning alongside physical train- ing as requisite for success on the track. "Although sheer speed is inbred, the sprinter must possess the proper mental attitude as he prepares for a race. "As many races have been won above the shoulders as below," Magnuson adds. Three Benefits He lists three chief benefits the individual can derive from parti- cipating in track. "You develop general physical well-being; you are exposed to working under competition, thus learning how to keep cool; and you appreciate the value of spirit." His major ambitions during his collegiate track career are to win the Big Ten 100-yard dash, and compete in that event in the NCAA meet. His academic future is un- settled. He is considering switch- ing from the Literary College to Business Administration, since he is interested in some sort of busi- ness career. LESS TENSION IN SPRING: Football Practice Ends Tomorrow f ?i.' (~. By BOB ROMANOFF v Tomorrow at 2 p.m. thousands of fans will file into Michigan's giant stadium to watch the final scrimmage of spring football drills. The intra-squad scrimmage will Ii i end the 20-days of spring drills allowed by the NCAA. In preparation for tomorrow's game and for next fall, when the Big Ten season opers, the players have worked out two hours a day, five days a week for the last month. At 3 p.m. every day they are suited up and out for practice at Ferry Field. As they come out on to the field they report to the managers who take attendance. Learn Fundamentals For the first hour they divide up into smaller: groups, where they limber up and learn the funda- mentals of playing their positions, under the expert eyes of Michi- gan's eight-man coaching staff. During spring practices the coaches are more at ease because the tension of the fall campaign is still four months away. For the first hour Head Coach Bennie Oosterbaan roams around the field getting a good look at all the prospects or sits on the side- lines where he can get a good look at the total practice. If a baseball game is going on during the practice, every once and a while Oosterbaan will turn around to sneak a glimpse of it, or he will inquire from one of the spectators or managers the score of the game. Wally Weber, jovial freshman football coach and. the man who gives the commentaries on the radio after Michigan football games, provides a humorous note to the drills. As one of Michigan's good-will ambassadors on the banquet cjrcuit he picks up many jokes which he tells to many of his friends and ex- classmates who come out to watch the practice. End with Scrimmage During the second hour Ooster- baan will usually call the players together and have them divide up into two squads for scrimmages. The only rule which Oosterbaan has for spectators, reporters in- cluded, is that they nust stand on the sidelines and that they should not fraternize with the players during practice. ..---------.. ...------------------------------ 1 t RACING, FORM ----------------------- ---------------_ PARADE t HOUSE GROUPSI I Police Motorcycle Escort 1 Al Capp in car Two Snootrac I Central Committee Darby 1 1. Humphreymobile ..... Delta Upsilon-Alpha Epsilon Phi 1 2. Cinderella ... .... .Theta Xi-Chi Omega I 1 3. Toonerville Trolley .... Sigma Alpha Mu-Theta 1 4, Batmobile ....... . ... Anderson-Prescott 1 I Anderson Band 1 1 5. Scrooge McDuck ...... 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