THE MICHIGAN D AILY PAGE THREE Wolverine Grid Varsity Spots Tightly Co ntested Many Newcomers Are SPOR TS NEWS + VIEWS + COMMENT By BILL MULLENDORE, Daily Sports Editor THE TOP PIECE of news from the world of sport right at the moment concerns Joe McCarthy's attempt to resign as manager of the New York Yankees and Yankee owner Larry McPhail's refusal to accept said resignation. It has long been rumored that McCarthy would retire soon, perhaps at the close of the present season, but the Yankee pilot's unexpected action still struck the sports world with considerable force. Even though plagued by more or less chronic illness, McCarthy still strikes the average fan as something of an indestructible entity, a guy who seemingly goes on for- ever. Very few managers in the history of the game can look back on a careet as successful or as apparently soul-satisfying. As manager of the "Bronx Bombers," McCarthy has led eight teams into World Series playoffs and has come off the winner in six of them. And when Mc- Carthy's teams weren't winning pennants, they were always giving someone a terrific battle for the coveted top spot. AGAIN, probably no manager has handled so many great ball players in his day. Lou Gehrig, Babe Ruth, Vernon (Goofy) Gomez, Charlie Rfuffing, Red Rolfe, Bob Muesel, Joe Gordon, Tony Lazerri, Frank Crosetti, Joe DiMaggio, Charlie Keller, and a veritable host of others have all passed under his sway at one time or another. Practically all of the famed "Mur- derers Row" and its several successors have passed from the scene now, but their names live on in baseball history.. McCarthy left his mark in the managerial field as a perfectionist, as a man who demanded the impossible-and often got it. His teams played as mechanically perfect a brand of baseball as has ever been achieved in the annals of the game. With the onset of the war, the Yankees were hit harder than most clubs. Star players drifted away until now the 1945 New York club is only a spectre of former greatness. It must seem just a little queer to a man who made a habit of managing champions to find his team wallowing in the unfamiliar depths of the second division. But all good things must come to an end, and apparently McCarthy has very nearly approached his own personal end as manager of the Yankees. Even if he does stick out this season, the odds are against his putting in an appearance for the 1946 pennant chase. The game will lose a great leader and a great man with his passage. AMONG the odd items worth noting in the world of baseball is the remarkable comeback Louis Norman (Buck, Bobo) Newsom, the man who, by his admission, is the greatest ditcher in baseball. Roly- poly Bobo has never been quite the same since he pitched the Detroit Tigers to a pennant, and almost to a world's championship, back in 1940. In the ensuing years he has gone steadily downhill, but recent developments would seem to indicate that there is life in the old boy yet. Newsom has won his last four outings after losing 12 games in a row for the Philadelphia Athletics. Over the 36-inning stretch, he has given up just three runs and 14 hits, which is pretty fair pitching in any league. Climaxing his performance was a nifty whitewash job of the league-leading Detroit Tigers Monday night, in which he blanked the Bengals, 1-0, and drove in his team's only run to best Stubby Overmire in a fine mound duel.j Major League Standins .. . AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. *GB W L Pt. *GB Detroit .... .47 36 .566Chicago ..........52 32 .624 ... Washit....... 44 39 .530 3 S st. Louis .........50 38 .568 4, Chicago n......44 41 .518 4 Brooklyn .........49 39 .557 51 Bhigos ..44 41 .518 4 Pittsburgh........48 42 .533 7' Boston...........44 41 .518 4 St. Louis.41 40 .506 5 New York .........47 45 .511 912 . 40uis1......Bos4on40..5.6.541 47 .466 1312L New York.....42 40 .512 4 C a4Boston. 11% Cleveland........40 43 .482 7 Cincinnati ........40 42 .488 11/ Philadelphia......30 52 .366 16 Philadelphia ......25 68 .269 32 *Games behind leader. Games behind leader. THURSDAY'S GAMES THURSDAY'S GAMES Pittsburgh at St. Louis, night. Philadelphia at New York. Cincinnati at Chicago. Only game scheduled. Only games scheduled. Continuous from 1 P.M. COOL! DAILY OFFICIAL Week Days 30c to 5 P.M. BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) STARTS TODAY in French on the French painter BLAZI G! BOISTEROUS! Paul Gauguin on Thursday, July 26 at 8 p. m. (EWT), 7 p. m. (CWT), in room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. After the lecture the members of the club will gather in the grill room gF TFHE of the Michigan League for a social hour. All those iterested are cor- dially invited to hear the lecture of Professor Julio Payro. French Tea today at 4 p., m. EWT JOHN WAYNE (3 p. m. CWT) in the International ANN DVORAK Center. SCILDKRAUT Postwar Conference: Afternoon- Charles E. Phillips, "Canadian-Amer- x fRIAWLEfYican Experience in Educational Co- GREY operation." Evening-Alfred L. Burt, "Canada as a Test of Co-operation between the United States and the British Commonwealth." Also MOSELEY TYPEWRITER CO. 114 So. 4th Ave. Phone 5888 TYPEWRITERS AVAILABLE ier Apples Order now for early delivery -Y. of this Clean, Family Newspaper THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Free from crine and sensational news ... Free from political a Free from "soecial interest" control . . Free to tell you "GENERAL" CRISLER AND HIS STAFF-Michigan's grid tacticians put their heads together to concoct plans for victory in the -coming football battles. Lef t to right: "Biggie" Munn, line coach; Earl Martineau, backfield coach; Head Coach "Fritz" Crisler; Bennie O osterbaan, end coach; Art Valney, assistant coach and (kneeling) Bill Barclay, assistant coach. Whitney Martin Tells 01 About Sports Scene Writes About Ferriss, Nelson, Other Notables By WHITNEY MARTIN Associated Press Columnist Sgt. Joe Smith, Somewhere, U. S. Army, Dear Joe: Still no word from you. I guess you must be in the army of occupa- tion, although I don't see why they picked you as you never had an occu- pation in your life. Now if it had been an army of reputation, that would have been different. Boy, what a reputation you have! Taking a Rest Seriously, Joe, I miss you, and the reason I haven't written is because I was in the army of, vacation for a while. I'll try to give you a whiff of the sports news, although nothing much has happened. The Cubs are beginning to be taken seriously in the National League race, and I'm beginning to think that when I picked the Cardinals it was a typo- graphical error. Charley Grimm seems to have everything, including a lead of four games or so. Tigers Lead League The Tigers still are hanging on by their - eyebrows in the American League. They haven't been getting too many runs, although maybe I told you Hank Greenberg is back with them. They seem to be as good as any of the others, though, and I still think they can do it. They played a 24-inning 1-1 tie with, of all teams, the last-place Athletics the other day. Maybe that's what you'd call a neck and neck tie. -Maybe not, though. Boo Ferriss, the Red Sox pitcher, had won something like 17 games while losing two the last time I looked. That guy should be incorporated. He's a whole pitching staff himself. ODT Racing Ban Possibly you heard that the ODT put a ban on transportation of race horses from track to track by public carrier. I guess those horses I bet on thought there had been a ban on travel all the time. They never get any place. Or any show either, for that matter. Byron Nelson, as expected, won the P. G. A. title, and then his back went back on him and he was ordered to rest, thus missing the St. Paul open. His fellow pros probably will be ask- ing him solicitously: "Your back isn't any better, is it, I hope, I hope?" Tour Suggested Navy Secretary Forrestal and Ad- miral Nimitz suggest that the World Series winner make a tour of the Pacific War Theatre. Such a tour has been suggested off and on since the war started, but never before by anyone whose words were more than just sound, so maybe something will come of it this time. That's about all, Joe. As I say, nothing much has happened. I saw a headline the other day I thought was funny. It said: "Queer-looking Plug Amazes Veteran Casters." That must have been the horse I had in the last idj By Herbert Ruskin ... That as far as Michigan's All- Americans go, there have been more centers, guards and halfbacks than any other position. Each of these three positions holds five All -Amer- ican berths. Fullbacks and tackles fellow with four apiece, while ends and quarterbacks trail with three and two respectively. This makes a total of 28 men. The last two men to make college football's Hall of Fame were tackle Merv Pregulman and fullback Bill Daley. ... That the Michigan Stadium is the biggest of all the schools in the Western Conference. Its ca- pacity of 85,753 is more than 13 thousand more than that of the Ohio State field. The smallest of all the schools is the Camp Ran- dall Stadium at Wisconsin. It has room for about 45,000 spectators. That the Western Conference was founded by the Presidents of the Universities of Michigan, Chicago, Illinois, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Pur- due and Northwestern. Indiana and Iowa were admitted in 1899, four years after the founding of the Con- ference. Ohio State, the last school to enter the Big Ten. did so in 1912. . That Bob Wiese, Michigan fullback who was transferred by the Navy in the middle of the 1944; season, finished third among the Big Ten scoring leaders. He fin- ished 12 points below Dimanscheff, who led the Conference with 54 points. Bluejackets Win Exhibition Tilts; Beat Cubs, Sox Bruins Are Shut Out; Feller Hurls 3-Hitter GREAT LAKES, Ill., July 25-VP)--- A former Chicago High School ath- lete, 18 year old Johnny Groth, be- came the most popular seaman at Great Lakes today when he belted out a double to drive in a run and give the Bluejackets a 1 to 0 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Bob Feller displayed his old form on the mound, allowing only threej hits to the National League leadingI Cubs, whose defeat was their first shut-out in a daytime game this season. In the seventh, after Bill Nichol- son and Phil Cavarretta had drawn walks, and an error by Walker Coop- er had loaded the bases, Feller fanned Ed Sauer and Dewey Wil- liams to retire the side. Chicago Cubs 000 000 000-0 3 0 Great Lakes 000 000 01x-1 9 2 Hanyzewski, Starr (7) and Gilles- pie, Williams (7); Feller and Cooper. * * * Sox Beaten by Fliers FLOYD BENNETT FIELD, N. Y., July 25 -P)-- The Floyd Bennett Field Naval Air Station today trounced the Chicago White Sox, 12-9, in a free-hitting exhibition watched by more than 4,000 men. Oris Hockett of the Sox homered in the second inning with nobody on. Trying for Top Positions Quarterback Spot Again Filled by Ponsetto; Weisenberger to Return for Fall Practice As the Wolverine football squad nears the end of the fourth week of summer practice every spot on the varsity lineup is being keenly contested for by the hopeful 1945 grid candidates. Captain Joe Ponsetto seems to be the only member of the squad that has his position cinched. Starring in the quarterback's berth on last season's eleven, Ponsetto established himself as one of the best blockers in the country, as was evidenced by his'_ being selected to the All-American speed and are accomplished ball- blocking team. handlers. Backfield coach, Earl Martineau, At the right-half slot Warren Bentz feels that Ponsetto is set to handle and Hank Fonde are slugging it out, the "brain-trust" position, and be- while Jim Foltz and George Chiames, both newcomers, are working out for lieves that Ponsetto's experience will the fullback job. count heavily in holding together the Competition for line positions is neophite backfield, hot and heavy at the present writing. The other backfield positions are Harry Watts, who shared the center Theothr bckfel poitins reberth with John Lintol on the '44 being fought for, tooth and nail, by brewtappenrs tolho it'n the opefl nwcomrs.Howeercrew, appears to have his position the hopeful newcomers. However, pretty much in the bag. Watts was there is evidence that this competi-prtymcinhebg Wasws tion will be even more intense when playing sterling ball at the end of Jack Weisenberger, '44 letterwin- last season and gives evidence, ac- ner from Muskegon Heights, turns cording to head line coach Biggie up for fall practice Aug. 27. Munn, of turning in another banner year. Weisenberger, who played halfback Lintol, who has been working out last year, appeared to be one of the at tackle for most of the summer most promising members of the drill, has ,been promoted to first squad. Although a freshman, he par- string guard, where he and Stu ticipated in most of the games and, ,ave been aternatmCanton, toward the end of the season, was performing with no mean ability. This past week's forward wall drills perfrmig wth o man biltyhave been characterized by a great Weisenberger is somewhat of a triple- deal f interchanging of positions. threat man, excelling in long-range Bob Callahan, ex-Missouri center, punting as well as running and pass- who has just returned to practice aft- ing. er a tonsillectomy, has been switched Meanwhile Pete Elliott and Walt from guard to tackle. Teninga are the leading tryouts for After practicing at the flanks for the halfback post. Both Elliott, 190 several weeks, Joe Soboleski, from pound, six-foot Navy man from Grand Rapids, Mich., has moved Bloomington, Ill.; and Teninga, a into the third varsity post. James freshman, who made a name for him- Rehberger, West Allis, Wis., ap- self playing for Chicago's Morgan pearsto be settled in the tackle Park High School, have plenty of position, although he has also been drilling at guard. DLLeading the field of end prospect- Detr it L neupives are Ed Bahlow and Don Her- shberger. Bahlow has played two mforyears of college ball for Wisconsin, while Hershberger, who hails from Freeport, Ill., was a mainstay of the Chisox Series Freeport High School squad. DETROIT, July 25-(P)-The De- troit Tigers, still three games ahead of the pack in the American League flag fight, came home today after I34. their worst two-week stretch of theyou a season, beaten eight times in12games in the East. Manager Steve O'Neill hinted of LOV at least one change in the Tiger lineup by the opening of a three- game set with the Chicago White Sox here Friday. Jim Outlaw, who in the has been sharing the left field pob with Hank Greenberg, may shift to third to relieve Bobby Maier. Outlaw played the hot corner in the Minors and during Big League stints at Boston and Cincinnati. Catcher Paul Richards, sent home * You woen who have sons, from Boston two weeks ago to under- brothers, husbands among go treatment for a sprained ankle; America's fighting men don't Pitcher Paul (Dizzy) Trout, recover- ing from a siege of illness, and pitch- need to be told the impor- er Joe Orrell, who 'has been out with a sprained back, are all expected to fince of tin salvage. be ready for service in the White Sox You know tin is a vital war series, O'Neill said. The St. Louis Browns follow Chi- cago into Briggs Stadium, after which -needed to make protective the Tigers move to Chicago for a five-game series before returning containers for blood plasma, home to stand off an invasion of East- medicines, and food-needed em clubs making their third inter- for shells, raIios, teiephones, sectional swing. AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG THURS., JULY 26, 1945 Eastern War Time 7:00--News. 7:05--Morning Round-up. 7:15-Sleepy Head Serenade 8:00-News. 8:15-1050 Club. 8:30-Breakfast Melodies. 8:45-Bouquet for Today, 8:55-Musical Interlude. 9:00-News. 9:05-Music Box. 9:30-community Calendar 9:45-Lean Back & Listen. 10 :00-News. 10:05-Carmen Cavallero. 10:15-What Do You Know. 10:30-Broadway Melodies. 10:40-Women Today. 10:45--Waltz Time. 11:00-News. 11:05--Piano Moods. 11:15-Mario Morelli. 11:30-Farm & Home Hour. 12:00-News. 12:15-Jesse Crawford. 12:20-Merle Pitt. 12:25-college & Martial Airs, 12:30-Trading Post. 12:45-Man on the Street. 1:00-News. 1:05-Salon Music. 1 :10-Dick Gilbert. 1:15-Burl Ives. 1:30-Johnny Long. 1:45-Marie Green-Al & Lee Reiser. 1:55-Today's Hit Tune 2:00-News. 2:05-Bob Halsey. 2:15--U. of M. 2:45-Song Spinners 3:00-News 3:05 Fred FeibeI 3:15--Lawrence Welk 3:30-Band Music 3:45-Milt Herth 4:00-News 4:05--Gerald Allaire 4:30--Ranch Boys and Bet- ty Lou 4:45---Misch Borr and Orch. 5:00-News. 5:05-Music for Listening. 5:10--Hollywood Reporter. 5:15-Mystery Melodies. 5:30-Rec. Room Rythms. 5:45--Sports Revue. 6:00---News. 6:15--HarryhHorlick, 6 :30--Telephone Quiz. 6:45-Flashes From Life. 6:55--Piano Interlude. 7:00-News. 7:15--Fireside Harmonies. 7 :25--Band of the Week. 7:30-A. A. Civic Program. 7:45--evening Serenade. 8:00-News. 8:05-Dance Time. 8:15--Put & Take It. 8:30---virginia Kidwell 8:45--Johnny Green & , Hot Jasper. 9:00-News. 9:05-Hal Stuart. i ( R There will be a meeting of Sphinx, junior honor society, to- night at 7:00 p. m. (EWT) at the Michigan Upion. LA.Mml F7-1 - Starting Today THRILLING IN SIMPLE GRANDEUR! i CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 11 I A' HELP WANTED MEN: The hospital needs you. Janit- ors, orderlies, and wall washers are needed. Part time orderly positions available in evening. Apply person- nel office, Room 1022, Univ. Hosp. WANTED LOST: Blue, silver cigarette case, lighter. Sentimental value. Reward. No questions asked. Call 21347. FOR RENT LIVE BETTER permanently in PIT- TSFIELD VILLAGE. You'll get more out of life-in this permanent ,,.'/ I E