SUNDAY, JULY 27, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE PAGE THREE SPORTS RETORTS ld By BOB MARGOLIN, Co-Sports Editor IT WAS A JUBILANT Bill Perigo we spoke to on the phone yes- Form er Stan f After fifteen years as an outstanding high school coach and an- other three seasons tutoring the Western Michigan basketball squad 7,887 Points Michigan's Ernie McCoy. HELSINKI-(IP)-Bob Mathias, "NATURALLY, I am pretty happy about the whole thing," Perigo the 21-year-old superman from said, and indeed his excitement could easily be sensed over a hundred Tulare, Calif., smashed his own miles of long distance wires. Furthermore, he continued, "I consider world record in the Olympic De- it a tremendous challenge." cathlon yesterday as the United It is a challenge which we feel confident he can meet. His States swept the gruelling 10- record and popularity can not be taken lightly and it is very prob- event program. able that Fritz Crisler, despite the fact that he did not pick a "big The six-foot, three-inch, 198- name" coach, has made a shrewd choice. pound Stanford University full- Perigo uses the fast break, something that has been entirely lack- back, who first won the decath- ing in the Michigan system. If used properly, a group of mediocre play- lon as a lad of 17 four years ago, ers can produce results far beyond their talents. rolled up 7,887 points. He estab- * # . lished the world record of 7,825 in BECAUSE OF THE BIG TEN ruling making freshman ineligible qualifying for the team in his home $ to play again, Perigo will have few new faces in a lineup that barely town. escaped the Big Ten cellar last winter. However, Perigo's introduction of the break may well lead to an improved finish next March. old Plainfield, N.J., high school The future years seem promising for the Wolverines under boy, finished second with 6,975 and Perigo. As a native of Indiana he is sure to attract many potential Floyd Simmons of Pasadena, Calif., courtmen from that rapid basketball state. Also, having coached completed the sweep with 6,788 high school and college teams for 16 years in southwest Michigan, points for third place. Vladimir he will be something of a drawing card for high school ball players Volko of Russia was fourth follow- 4 from that section of the state. ed by Sepp Hipp of Germany and Lastly, Perigo brings with him Matt Patanelli, a Michigan alum- Goran Widenfelt of Sweden. F nus who has worked with him for three years at Western Michigan. The two proved to be a winning combination at Kalamazoo and they Mahias turn ein the bestern should continue to do so at Michigan. formances among the 21 ath- letes in the 400-meter run, shot The Michigan coaching staff is among the finest in the world, put, discus and javelin. He was We congratulate Perigo on having gained admittance to it and sin- second in the 110-meter hurdles cerely hope he will have many years of fruitful association with it and 100-meter dash and third in and with the students and athletes they represent. the pole vault and high jump. He sagged to sixth place in the broad jump, and made his worst Lions Open Drills Tomorrow comparative showing, eighth place, in the 1500 meters - the final event of the competition. Here's his world rtcord perform- ance event-by-event: YPSILANTI ---(A)- The Detroit Hoernschemeyer, Pat Harder, 100-teters-1O.9 seconds, Lions cleared the way for full scale Lindell Pearson, Jim Doran and Broad Jump-6.74 meters (22 ,,pre-season football practice yes- Gus Cifelli ft. 1.35 in.) terday with the signing of Don * Shot Put-13.89 meters (45 ft. Doll, a defensive halfback who THE GENERAL Manager said 6.84 in.) J some persons thought might be a any absentees from camp tomor- .High Jmp-1.90 meters (6 ft. bit balky. row would be fined $25 a day. 281 eters-50.9 seconds. Doll, the former University of Players not under contract can 110 Meters Hurdles-14.7 see- Southern California ace, is ex- attend camp, however, although onds. pected to arrive at the Lions' they can't dress for practice. Discus-46.89 meters (153 ft. training base on the Michigan Quarterback Layne, although 10.06 in.) State Normal College campus to- still unsigned, has been attend- Pole Vault-4.00 meters (13 morrow. Ing the rookie sessions for the ft. 1.47 in.) ALSO DUE there are 22 other past week trying out his pitch- Javelin Throw-59.21 meters veterans of the 1951 campaign, ing arm, which went lame late (194 ft. 3.15 in.) who arescfheule to jo in g 2 last season. 1,500 Meters-4 minutes 50.8 who are scheduled to join the 28seconds. rookies and six veterans in the Other experienced hands who The athletes put in nearly 27 recruit camp. have been working out early are s Geneal anaer Nck er-Jim Hardy, the new quarterback hours of running, jumping and f General Manager Nick Ker- Ji adtenwqatrakthrowmng in the two days. They t bawy sai dthat a total of eight via the Chicago Cards, halfback t veterans still have not signed Jack Christiansen, end Leon Hart, in- end Cloyce Box, back from a year their 1952. contracts. Thesem-inteMrnsad'gadLs I a a u elude Bobby Layne, Thurman in the Maries, and guard LesO McGraw, John Prchlik, Bob Bigaman. COOL COOL Doak Walker, the Lions' top-grade S left halfback, will be here tomor- NATIONAL LEAGUE 3 -row. Walker is still taking treat- W w Pet GB ments for a severely cut right arm Brooklyn ...61 26 .701 at his home in Dallas and his phy- New York ..57 31 .648 4 TODAY THRU TUES. sician reportedly has asked that St. Louis ...53 41 .564 11%/ he delay his return. Chicago ....47 45 .511 16/ DEADLY ESPIONAGE! Doak, however, has, assured Philadelphia 47 46 .505 17 A cowUMetA H ItLEA$E .Bson...9 53.2 4 MADE wiTN TH Coach Buddy Parker the arm is Boston .....39 53 .424 242 i A OF in shape, adding he wants to Cincinnati ..38 57 .400 27 THE FEDERAL BUREAU continue the treatments as a Pittsburgh .c.27 7 .351 39 OF INVESTIGATION precautionary measure. TODAY'S GAMES The signing of Doll wasn't ex- Pittsburgh at Boston (2)- actly a surprise, but there had Main (2-8) and Friend (4-15) been talk he wouldn't be back vs Surkont (6-9) and Bickford Swith the Lions this year. A ter- 6-9). rifc defensive performer in '49 St. Louis at Brooklyn-Clark and '50, he fell off the pace last 10-0) vs Roe (7-0). year and the team has been Cincinnati at New York-(2) searching for new defensive back- --Perkowski (8-6) and Nuxhall l field material. (0-3) vs Koslo (7-3) and Ken- An example is the acquision of nedy (2-3). Earl (Jug) Girard from the Green Chicago at Philadelphia (2)- Dowden of Baylor and a third 10). player to be named later. 4 : Parker pared off three% rookies AMERICAN LEAGUE Coming Wednesday from the roster Friday. But there W L Pet. GB probably will be no further reduc- New York ..56 38 .596 MA R L ENE D I ET R ICLH tions among the 28 survivors until Boston. 51 41 554 4 RANCHO NOTORIOUS" after the first real scrimmage- Washington 51 42 .548 41/ possibly Thursday. Cleveland . .52 43 .547 4V2 r_- Chicago ....51 46 .526 61/ Philadelphia 42 45 .483 101 St. Louis .... 38 58 .396 19 Detroit .....32 60 .348 23 ! TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Chicago (2)- lShantz (17-3) and Kellner (6- 8) vs. Grissom (7-5) and Dob- ' ©Q son (9-7). Boston at St. Louis (2)--Nix- on (2-3) and Parnell (7-5) Pil- lette (6-9) and Bearden (3-2). Washington at Cleveland (2) -Marrero (8-4) and Master- son (4-4) vs Lemon (10-8) and Garcia (14-7). New York at Detroit (2)- Reynolds (12-5) and Miller (2- 3) vs Trucks (4-11) and Hoeft IF IT'S A QUESTION (1.3). OF MONEY!! The quickest and cheapest way with the Best Results, PLAYING SUNDAY for thne thinnc In ,r . as Tops WorldDecath ion Mark ord Ace Gets for Easy Win began yesterday morning at 10 o'clock and didn't finish until some 12 hours later. But there were still 10,000 or more fans in the stands, yelling for Mathias to come out of his dressing room and take a bow. LOOKING AS is he had just come out for the competition, the young Californian came out and jogged around the track and then stopped to sign autographs for a number of small boys, who leaped over the fence. Yesterday's events, run off through alternate rain and shine, were so gruelling that one com- petitor collapsed at the finish line of the concluding 1,500-me- ter run. \l FORMER 'M' MAN: Patanelli Returns to His Alma Mater MATT PATANELLI . . . back on campus Olympic Marks Broken In Track, Swimming HELSINKI-(P)--An unknown Luxembourg chemical engineer, Joseph Barthel, won the spot- lighted 1,500 meters of the Olym- pic games yesterday with Bob McMillen of the United States coming from last place and almost nipping him at the tape. It was the greatest metric mile field ever assembled andthe first eight finishers were under the Olympic record of 3:47.8 set by the immortal 'Jack Lovelock of New Zealand in 1936. *' * * BARTHEL and McMillen were given exactly the same time of 3:45.2, which is the equivalent of running the mile in 4:03 or better. Barthel's performance brought the total of broken Olympic rec- ords in men's and women's track and field to 23. A big, blonde Russian girl, Galina Zybina, broke the world record in the shot put with 15.28 meters (50 - feet 2.58 inches) as other rec- ords tumbled in swimming and weightlifting. Six world marks in track and field have now been exceeded in these brilliant games and one has been tied. * 3 *k WITH SOME late returns of the day still to come, Russia held the overall team lead on unofficial points with 389 followed by the United States 265, Hungary 110, Sweden 94 and Germany 74. Despite the cold and occasion- al showers, nearly 70,000 turned out for the widely heralded 1,- 500 meter race and to see the windup of the decathlon. So big and so fast was the field in the1,500 meters that gruelling trial heats Thursday and semi- finals on Friday were required to cut the field down to 12 men. ROLF LAMERS, a little Ger- man, set the early pace with War- ren Druetzler ofthe United States at his shoulder. Werner Lueg, an- other German, ran third, with Pat- rick El Mabrouk of France at his heels. The tall and fabulous Eng- lishman, Roger Bannister, held back, and McMillen lagged at the end of the file. The first lap went in a sizz- ling 57.2 seconds. Then Lueg moved up to secnd. At the end of three laps Lueg took the lead and Bannister loped up to a close third. Dreutzler dropped back. Going into the last curve it was still Lueg. Then from a challenging position came Bar- thel. He took over in the final straightaway as Lueg faded. Then up came the slender Mc- Millen, running like a halfback in a broken field. His sprint carried him from almost last to a tight second in the space of half a lap. THE LAST 400 meters went een faster than the first-a heart breaking 57 seconds. MICHIGAN NOWSHOWING BURLESQUE QUEEN GOES TO COLLEGE! ...AND THE STUDENTS ARE LEARNING A NEW KIND OF KNOWLEDGE f Lueg finished third in 3:45.4. He was followed by Bannister in 3.46, El Mabrouk in the same time, and Rolf Lamers in 3:46.8. Those brilliant times created new national records in the' case of the United States, Great Brit- ain, France, Australia, and Lux- embourg. MC MILLEN'S silver medal cap- ped the best showing the United States has made in the distance runs since the men's track, and field program was stabilized in its present form. Mal Whitfield won the 800 and tied up his own Olym- pic record of 1:49.2, and Horace Ashenfelter won the 3,000 meter steeplechase in the record time of 8:45.4. Marianne Werner of Germany moved into second place behind Miss Zybina in the shot put, breaking the solid Russian front. Kladija Tochenova and Tamara Tyshkevic of Russia were third and fourth. Pretty Marjorie Jackson of Aus- tralia won her second gold medal of the games when she took the 200 meter dash in :27.7, three- tenths of a second slower than her world record-setting time made in a heat. Bertha Brouwer of Hol- land was second and Nadezhda Khnykina of Russia third. THE AMERICAN 400 meter re- lay team won its trial heat with ease in the fastest time of the day :40.3. It is composed of Dean Smith, Harrison Dillard, Lindy Remignino, and Andy Stanfield. The feeling of total disregard for Olympic records which the performers in track and field set up spread quickly to swim- ming which opened its first day of competition. Clark Scholes of Michigan State set an Olympic mark of :57.1 in the 100-meter free style semi- final heats, erasing the time of :57.3 set by Wally Ris of the Unit- ed States at London. HE HAD BEEN narrowly beaten by Goran Larsson of Sweden, a darkhorse, in the first round of heats, and he came back .to beat Larsson by inches and set the rec- ord in the afternoon. In basketball, the United States romped all over Czecho- slovakia, 72-47, and looked much smoother than-it did Friday. On the other hand, its arch rival, Russia, had trouble beating Fin- land, 47-35. Other basketball scores in the first series of round robin elim- inations: Uruguay 70 Hungary 56, Bulgaria 52 Mexico 44, Chile 74 Egypt 46, France 58 Cuba 42, and Brazil 71 Philippines 52. By BOB MARGOLIN Matt Patranelli, appointed yes- terday as- assistant basketball coach to new mentor William Per- igo, returns to the scene of his outstanding collegiate athletic ca- reer of 1935, 36 and 37. One of the most versatile ath- letes in Michigan history, Matt earned eight letters in football, basketball and baseball at Michi- gan. HE CLIMAXED three years of varsity football as captain of the 1937 team. Despite the fact that the team won only one game that year and that he was plagued by injuries, Patanelli was named as an end on the Western Confer- ence's second team. He was des- cribed as an "aggressive, teeth- rattling football player." As a forward and guard on the basketball teams of 1935, 36 and 37, Patanelli was popular with the fans., His aggressiveness was evident on the court, also, and he often fouled out. Nevertheless, he helped Coach Frank Cappon's team to third place in the Big Ten in 1937. When he left the floor for the last time he and Capt. Johnny Gee "were honored with an ova- tion that brought memoriesof Baseball NEW YORK-(1P)--The pennant drives of ,the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Yankees were stall- ed again yesterday but only the Dodgers lost ground to their clos- est pursuers. Brooklyn's lead in the National was cut to 42 games over the New York Giants. The Dodgers dropped a 5-3 decision to the St. Louis Cardinals while the Giants clipped Cincinnati, 7-2. * * * THE DETROIT TIGERS handed the New York Yankees their fourth straight loss, beating the Bombers, 10-6, on pinch-hitter Steve Souchock's grand-slam hom- er in the 11th off Bobby Hogue. The Yanks remained four games in front, however, as the St. Louis Browns knocked off the runnerup Boston Red Sox, 7-2. The Wash- ington Senators regained third place from Cleveland by beating the Indians, 11-10. Chicago whip- ped, Philadelphia, 9-3, in the re- maining game. In other National League games, Pittsburgh defeated Bos- ton, 6-4, on George Metkovich's two-run double in the ninth, and Philadelphia trounced Chicago, 7-2, as Robin Roberts posted win No. 15, Larry Jansen scattered nine hits as he coasted to his 12th straight victory over Cincinnati since Aug. 29, 1948. The Giants put the game in the bag in the fifth inning when Hank Thompson belted a grand- slam homer to highlight a five- run rally. * * * VETERANS Billy Johnson and Al Brazle teamed up to lead the cards to their second straight vic- tor yover Brooklyn. Johnson broke a 3-3 tie in the eighth with a two- hit, single off Joe Black. Brazle relieved rookie Wilmer (Vinegar Bendi) Mizell in the eighth with two on and none out and slammed the door on the Dodgers. Souchock's winning homer was his second in as many games against his fomer Yankee team- mates. He homered in the ninth Friday night to beat New York, 2-1. Mickey Mantle hom- ered with the bases loaded for the Yanks in the first inning off Ted Gray, who went the dis- tance for Detroit. the Democratic Convention," ac- cording to press reports. * * * PATANELLI also played base ball under Ray Fisher in 1936 and 37 and was a teammate of Vic Heyliger, now varsity hockey coach. In 1936 the nine won the Conference title. After graduation in 1937, Matt entered the business field. He didn't return to the sports scene until 1948, two years after fin- ishing a four year hitch in the Navy. In 1948 he joined the coaching CLASSIFIEDS FOR RENT MICHIGAN DAILY AVAILABLE - A new 3-room de- Phone 23 -24-1 lue apartment which accommodates HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. four. 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Ph. 5539. 2 OR 3 RIDERS wanted. Driving to Kan- FOR RENT sas City, Missouri, August I or 2. Ref- erences exchanged. Phone 2-3006 be-, ATTRACTIVE APT. near Campus to tween 6:00xand 7:00 P.M. sublet July 15 to Sept. 15. Real bar- gain for right tenant. 3-1479 evenings. READ DAILY CLASSIFIEDS TONIGHT (SUNDAY) ONE SHOW - AT 8:00 P.M. ONLY CihpnaSL uidd presents MONTY GRACIE WOOLLEY FIELDS HOLY MATRIMONY a 20th Century Fox Picture Based on Arnold Bennett's "Buried Alive." "Practically Perfect . . . Exceptional . .. Downright Good" -The New Yorker "A literate comedy . . Superlative Fun . . . a charming picture full of sly humor." --N.Y. Times Also Arturo Toscanini The New York Jan Peerce Philharmonic Orchestra in VERDI'S "Hymn of the Nation" "Tremendous"-- Saturday Review EXTRA! U.P.A. COLOR CARTOON The brilliant, gap and provocative staff of Western Michigan Col- lege. He assisted in football, base- ball and basketball there and when Coach William Perigo resigned from Western Michigan yesterday to assume the coaching duties at Ann Arbor, Patanelli was a nat- ural choice to follow him here as his assistant. * * * HE BRINGS with him a know- ledge of basketball and an ag- gressiveness and popularity that should be of invaluable aid in re- building the Wolverine hoop squad. G IN 1 U. of M. DEPT. OF SPEECH PRESENTS PHILIP BARRY S 11 COMEDY r r /' .. /L Ih 4 q 5e I ..m itANhu cvrebkol Revised by Robert E. Sherwood WED THRIJ SAT. - R P.M. -. g~~7'~) I . 'l.11' All 'ii