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August 02, 1944 - Image 3

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1944-08-02

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1944

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE TEE

_ _a_ _ _ _ _ _._
f _

Trial Case?-Big Ten Coaches Vote on Bob Westfall

r

Vote May Set Eligibility
Precedent for Civilians
By BILL MULLENDORE r:
"Bullet Bob" Westfall, All-American fullback of two years ago who
has been in and out of the Michigan football picture since the start of
practice a month ago, once more leaped into the limelight when it was.
learned that a vote is being taken of all Western Conference football
coaches to determine whether he is eligible for another year of competition.
The wartime rules permitting servicemen to compete in the Big Ten
after having completed three years of collegiate competition contained nof
provision regarding civilians. Westfall, who carries an honorable dis- >

Trout Captures Bob Falkenburg
Number 17 fromlPaces Field in

charge from the Army, is the firstK
such case to be affected by the rul-
ing.
The result of the vote, which is
"State Begins
Grid Practice
EAST LANSING, Aug. 1-(AP)-
Footballs were dusted off at Michi-
gan State College today and handed
to a squad of 25 players who reported
to Coach Charley Bachman who will
conduct a- four-week mid-summer
practice aimed to get the Spartans
back on the Intercollegiate football
trail which they abandoned as a
war-time measure in March, 1943.
There was not a single letter win-
ner in the group which was composed
chiefly of freshmen below the select-
ive service age of 18 years.
With none of the men having had
intercollegiate experience, coaches
expected to devote most of the sum-
mer practice session to teaching fun-
damentals and explaining plays that
will be used next fall in playing a
four-game schedule.
BUY WAR BONDS & STAMPS

<+>

being conducted by mail, will un-
doubtedly set a precedent in future
cases of similar nature and is be-
ing viewed with great interest in
all Conference schools.
Westfall, it is understood, has de-
cided to reject the offers of the De-
troit Lions and other professional
football teams and will enter the
University in the fall. It is not
known whether he will play for the
Wolverines even if the Big Ten men-
tors give him the go-ahead.
Meanwhile, hot weather brought
the gridders out in shorts yester-
day for a long workout on the
passing attack. Bill Culligan and
Bob Nussbaumer did the tossing
with ends Bruce Hilkene, Dick Ri-
fenburg, Max Kelly and Sheldon
Kavieff doing most of the receiv-
ing.
Culligan, the former terror of the
Detroit high school ranks while win-
ning all-city and all-state honors at
Cooley High, was especially effective,
connecting for several long gains.
Regular scrimmages will be resum-
ed as soon as the weather permits.
Only three weeks remain before the
squad will take a week's breather
prior to the final drive beforeathe
season's opener, Sept. 16.

-A. P. Wirephoto
IN KLUTZ'S CLUTCHES-Babe Dahlgren, Pittsburgh first baseman,
is tagged out at home plate as he slides between the legs of Boston
Braves catcher, Clyde Kluttz, in second inning action at Boston (July
31). Babe tried to score from third after the catch of a fly, hit to center
by Frank Zak, but the toss from centerfielder Tommy Holmes to Kluttz
was in time. Pirates Mlayer, Pete Coscaret, has his back to the camera.
Pittsburgh won the game, 9-2.
MajoreagueSt g._
AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
IW L Pct. GB
W L Pet. GB' St. Louis ....... 69 26 G726
*St. Louis ...... 58 42 .580 -- Cincinnati .......54 52 .563 15%
Bostor..........52 46 .531 5 Pittsburgh......50 40 .556 162
New York .......50 46 .521 6 New York .......46 51 .474 25
Cleveland . :..... 51 49 .510 7 Chicago .........42 47 .472 24
DETROIT .......49 50 .495 8 Boston ..........39 56 .411 30
Chicago ........46 49 .484 9 Philadelphia ... .37 55 .402 30%
Philadelphia . .. .44 55 .444 132 Brooklyn ........38 58 .396 31%
*Washington ... .42 55 .433 14 TUESDAY'S RESULTS
*Does not includes night game. Cincinnati 5, New York 4.
TUESDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 14, Brooklyn 3.
DETROIT 8, New York 4. Pittsburgh 12, Boston 8 (8 in-
Cleveland 8, Boston 4. nings, to be completed at a later
Washington at St. Louis, night.date).
Phiaephia at.hicao, ingh. Chicago at Philadelphia, trans-
Philadelphia at Chicago, incom- portation strike.
plete. WEDNESDAY'S GAMES
WEDNESDAY'S GAMES Chicago at Philadelphia, twilight.
Philadelphia at Chicago (2). St. Louis at Pittsburgh, night.
Only games scheduled. Only games scheduled.
INDIANS SCALP HUGHSON:
Indians Hand Sox 4
Licking to Even Series
CLEVELAND, AUG. 1.-P)- Tex Reds Shade Gi*nts...
Hughson was handed his fifth loss
today instead of gaining his 17th NEW YORK, Aug. 1.-(IP)-Vet-
victory as the Cleveland Indians eran Ed Heusser entered today's
pounded him for 11 hits to turn back deadlocked Cincinnati-New York Gi-
the Boston Red Sox 8 to 4 and secured-
an even break in the four-game, ant game in the eighth inning and
series. I pitched and batted the Reds to a
The Sox broke a 2-all deadlock by, 5 to 4 triumph.
driving Jim Bagby from the mound He allowed only one hit in an in-
with a two-run rally in the seventh, ning and a third tenure on the
but the Tribe's Mickey Rocco tied mound and singled to start the Reds'
the count again in the last .half of half of the ninth. He scored ulti-
the inning by blasting a home run mately on Frank McCormick's long
over the right field screen with Paul fly. The latter sent the Reds off to a
O'Dean on base. flying start with a three-run homer
* * in the first.
Cards Pound Wyatt Cincinnati ....300 000 011-5 11 2
New York ....012 000 010-4 14 0
BROOKLYN, N.Y., Aug. 1.-(P)- Shoun, Heusser & Mueller; Brew-
Whitt Wyatt, who pitched the Brook- er, Feldman & Lombardi.
lyn Dodgers to the league pennant in * * *
1941, tested his ailing flipper today, Score Halts7 1
was shelled from the mound in less IL tL tS LDCS
than four innings and the St. Louis BOSTON, Aug. 1.- (/')- Pitts-
Cardinals won, 14 to 3.
Wyatt, making his first mound ap- burgh's Pirates rattled 18 hits all
pearance since June 28, was pounded over Braves' field today and wound
for ten hits and seven runs. All told, up on the long end of a 12 to 8 score
the Cards collected 17 blows off five in an uncompleted game with the
hurlers. Braves.
Whitey Kurowski, who has been on By agreement, the game was called
the bench of late because of weak to enable the visitors to catch a train.
hitting, got three singles and drove The contest, which saw the Pirates
in a pair of runs.
run wild for six stolen bases, will be
St. Louis . .. 310 330 130-14 17 2 finished in September when the Bucs
Brookly ... & .10 C 100 r;0 Branc1 , 2 return for their last visit of the sea-I
M. Cooper & W. Cooper; Branca, son.
Wyatt, Fuchs, Crocker, Melton & Babe Dahlgren was the heavy
Owen. sticker for the Pirates, poling his
SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: HARVEY FRANK

New York 8-4
York Belts Home Run;
Hoover Leads Attack
With Three Safeties
DETROIT, Aug. 1--(AP)-The De-
troit Tigers defeated the New York
Yankees 8 to 4 today before the
largest twilight attendance of the
season here-26,815--taking the ser-
ies, three games to one. Paul (Diz-
zy) Trout giving 14 hits scored his
16th win of the season. Ernie Bon-
ham was the loser.
Rudy York belted his 11th home
run of the season with one on in the
seventh.
The defeat. 10th in 17 games for
the Yankees on their current road
trip and 10th in 15 starts against
IDetroit this season, deprived New
York of a chance to move into sec-
ond place ahead of the Boston Red
Sox-
Third To Win 16
Trout, who beat the Yanks Satur-
day in relief, became the American
League's, third pitcher this season
to grab 16 wins. He has lost nine.
Bonham, suffering his fourth set-
back against eight victories, was bat-
ted from the box in the fourth in-
ning after permitting eight Detroit
hits and six runs.
Trout was pounded freely all the
way but his mates gave him plenty of
timely batting support.
Cramer Starts Scoring
Roger Cramer opened the game
with a double to center, was sacri-
ficed to, third by Eddie Mayo and
scored on Oscar Grimes' error on
Rudy York's grounder. The Yanks
tied it in the second when Johnny
Lindell singled, took second when
Cramer bobbled the ball in center
and scored on Nick Etten's single to
right.
Pinky Higgins' single, Bob Swift's
double to left and Joe Hoover's single
over second base accounted for two
Tiger runs in the second.
Swift Injured
In the Yankee third Milosevich
singled to center and was thrown out
at the plate on York's relay to Jim
Outlaw's throw after George Stirn-
weiss doubled down the right field
line. Swift suffered a torn finger
nail in the collision with Milosevich
at the plate and was replaced by
Paul Richards.
Higgins led off the Tiger fourth
with a single to center and Richards
singled to right putting men on first
and third. Higgins scored and Rich-
ards took third on Hoover's double.
Trout's fly to center scored Richards
and sent Hoover to third, from where
he also scored on Cramer's fly.
Mayo's single brought Al Lyons in
to relieve Bonham, who thus saw his
winning streak of six games go by
the boards. Mayo was out stealing
to end the inning and the Tigers led
6 to 1.
Sailors Will
From Pontiac
PONTIAC. MICH., Aug. 1-(AP)-
The Great Lakes Bluejackets won
their 36th baseball victory in 37
games by downing a Pontiac All-Star
nine 10 to 1 here tonight before a
crowd of 4,000.
Bob Jlinger and Virgil Trucks of
the sailors pitched hitless ball. for
the first five innings, Schoolboy Rowe
giving up six hits and the only Pon-
tiac run in his four-inning job. Rowe
clouted a two-run homer in the
ninth.
Great Lakes ..010 021 105-10 15 1
Pontiac ......000 000 010- 1 6 2
eighth home. run of the year, a triple
and two singles in five trips.-

Pittsburgh .... 430 102 20-12 18 11
Boston .......000 003 23- 8 12 0
(Called end eighth to allow team
to catch train). Starr, Roe & Lo-
pez; Tobin, C. Barrett, Klopp &
Masi.

Net Tourney I
Defeats Erwin Busiek
In Straight Sets as
Favorites Advance
KALAMAZOO, MICH., Aug. 1-
(AP)--Defending champion Bob Fal-
kenberg of Hollywood and Merced
Field, Calif., paced a parade of fav-
orites into third round matches in
the National Junior Tennis Cham
pionship today as only one seeded
performer, sixth-seeded Ed McGrath
of Brooklyn, N. Y., entered the list
of casualties.
Falkenburg was forced to go 22
games to oust Erwin Busiek,
Springfield, Mo., in straight sets,
7-5, 6-4. McGrath bowed to Henry
Pfister, San Francisco, 6-2, 6-3.
Falkenburg plays Richard Savitt of
El Paso, Tev.
No match went beyond two sets
and only three of the 32 sets went
more than 10 games in today's
singles. The boys division, with only
35 entries, reached the third round
yesterday and no singles play was
scheduled today.
Bernard (Tut) Bartzen, second
seeded junior who won the Western
championship last week, downed
Hurbert Rance, Chicago, 6-0, 6-4
and tomorrow will play Willian
Sayres of Detroit, the Michigan
champion, who whipped Sam Han-
Del of Philadelphia in the second
round, 6-0, 6-4.
CLASSIFIED
DIRECTORY
CLASSIFIED
RATES
$ .40 per 15-word insertion for
one or two days. (In-
crease of 10c for each
additional five words.)
Non-Contract
$1.00 per 15-word insertion for
three or more days. (In-
crease of 25c for each
additional five words.)
Contract Rates on Request
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-Pair of sun glasses on tennis
courts July 23. Call Luis Pacini.
22547.
LOST-Schaeffer pen, black back-
ground with pearl-like speckles.
Call 4089.
LOST-Silver band with bangles on.
205 Mason Hall, July 27. Reward.
Edna Sott. 24471.
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Sorority
pin on campus Friday night. Call
25618. Reward.
LOST: Naval identification card in
vicinity of Main and Liberty. Very
urgent that it be foun'd. Please call
M. Gannett. 24401.
BROWN MOTTLED Lifetime Schaef-
fer fountain pen in vicinity of
Education School. Reward. Call
Daily 23241.
IN MICHIGAN LEAGUE Thursday
night, a red billfold containing es-
sential driver's license and identi-
fication. Keep the money, no ques-
tions asked. Please phone 2-1327.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED: Kitchen help, wait-
ers. Excellent meals. Good pay.
University Grill, 615 E. William

upstairs.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT: 1 or 2 rooms for service
man and wife. Use of kitchen and
living room. Near campus. Phone
Virginia Dodd, 25579.

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