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July 09, 1952 - Image 3

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Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1952-07-09

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1952

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WRDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Grambeau Announces Intramural,
Student, Faculty.Golf Tournaments

East and West Europe Vie in Production Race

Assistant Intramural Sports Di- :
rector Rod Grambeau announced
yesterday that the I-M depart-
ment will hold summer golf tour-
naments in both student and fac-
ulty divisions.
Grambeau said that entries will
be accepted at the Golf Service
Building or at the Intramural of-
fice by phone up to July 13.
* * *
THE STUDENT tournament
will be 18 holes, while the fac-
ulty will play nine holes in their
tourney.
The flights for the tourna-
ment will be arranged accord-
ing to scores on an 18 hole
qualifying round. Entrants will
pay to play the qualifying round
t but from then on there will be
no charge in tournament com-
petition.
The Intramural department al-
so stated that individual trophies
will be awarded to winners in
each of the flights.
RULES AND procedure for the
nine hole faculty tournament will
be the same for the student com-
petition.
Last year's faculty tournament
was won by Don Robinson. Rob-
inson will be remembered by
Michigan football fans of a few

* * *

DON ROBINSON
. . . golfer too
* * *
years back as one of the spark-
plugs of Fritz Crisler's 1946
gridiron machine. He also per-
formed with Ray Fisher's base-
ball squad. He is at present a
member of both the football and
baseball coaching staffs of the
university. He handles the jun-
ior varsity for Bennie Ooster-
baan, and tutors freshman base-
ball prospects for his former
coach, Ray Fisher.

In last night's softball action,
pitcher Bill McKeachie of the Psy-
chology department's team turned
in his second one-hitter within a
week, blanking the Dental Mater-
ials Lab by a 14-0 score.
* * *
IN ADDITION to his pitching
excellence, which included eleven
stike-outs, McKeachie slammed a
home run.
Other scores were: Delta Tau
Delta 15, Phi Gamma Delta 10;
Theta Delta Chi 25, Phi Kappa
Tau 7; Chemistry "A" 23, Phy-
sies 5; and Pharmacy 11, Metals
Lab 8.
Results of Monday's action
were: Fletcher Hall 26, Chem-
istry "B" 0; Zeta Psi 9, Social
Research 8; Van Tyne House
17, Scott House 4; Hardrocks 8,
Air Force 3; Bartenders 22, Del-
ta Sigma Phi 8; and Jokers 10,
Rod's Boys 8.
Sarazen. Four
Strokes Down
In .British {Golf
ST. ANNE'S-ON-SEA, England
-- (R') - Stocky Gene Sarazen of
Germantown, N.Y., was only four
strokes behind the leader as five
Americans qualified yesterday for
the final four rounds of the Brit-
ish Open Golf Championship.
Sarazen, who won the British
Open 20 years ago, fired another
snappy 69 to go with his 69 of
Monday for a two-day aggregate
of 138.
* * *
THIS PLACED him sixth in the
list of 92 qualifiers, and close be-
hind the leader, Scotsman John
Panton, who carded a 66-68-134.
Joining Sarazen were Willie
Hunter of Los Angeles, with a
73 -73 -- 146; Willie Goggin,
Montclair, N.J., 73 - '75 - 148;
Jimmy Hines, Chicago, 74-75
149; and Frank Stranahan, To-
ledo, Ohio, amateur, with 75-77
-"152.
Each player toured a round at
both the Royal Lytham and Fair-
haven courses, and the qualifiers
will play the final four title
rounds at Royal Lytham.
Thesgood-and not so good-
scores made Monday and Tuesday,
however, will be discarded and
they start all over in the title
round at the 6,657-yard Lytham
layout.

By The Associated Press
Industrial production continued
to rise in western Europe last year,
according to surveys by the United
Natios, but not so fast as the out-
put of communist eastern Europe.
The U.N. figures show produc-
tion in eastern Europe went up
almost 22 per cent, while in seven
representative countries of west-
ern Europe the increase was less
than 10 per cent.
The figures further show that
the rapid postwar industrial ex-
pansion is now levelling off in both
regions after reaching all-time
peaks.
JUST HOW accurate this pic-
ture is no one can say. The infor-
mation all comes from official gov-
ernment sources, but is not subject
to verification. The U.N. simply
presents the figures for what they
are without vouching for their ac-
curacy.
At any rate, the figures show
that the increased production in
eastern Europe ranges from 15
per cent in industrialized Czech-
oslovakia to 30 per cent in Hun-
gary which is carrying on an
elaborate program of industrial-
ization.
In the west, the increases range
from one per cent in Denmark to
21 per cent in western Germany.
* * *
TAKING A look at the big pow-
ers, you find the Soviet Union
showing a gain of 16 per cent, Bri-
tain three per cent, France 12 per
cent and Italy 12 per cent.
In both eastern and western
Europe, the increase in military
expenditures were important
factors in keeping industrial
production on the upward trend.
The most important factor in
slowing dowvn the rate of in-
crease, on the other' hand, was
the reduced demand for con-
sumers goods.
This reduced demand was caus-
ed partly by the fact that there
had been considerable hoarding of
goods in anticipation of shortages
which failed to materialize and
partly by other factors, such as in-
creased taxes which reduced the
amount of income available for
expenditures.
BOTH EASTERN and western
Europe also had similar experi-
ence in the expansion of heavy in-
dustries. In both regions, by far
the biggest gains were in the pro-
duction of steel, heavy machinery
and engineering items.
In steel production, eastern
Europe-including the Soviet
Union-showed larger increases
than " western Europe, but still
was substantially below the west
in total production.
Eastern Europe, for instance,
produced 40 million metric tons of
steel in 1951 as against 57 million
metric tons in the Marshall Plan
countries of the west. Russian
production alone, however, in-

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* * *

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creased 4.1 million tons while wes-
tern European output went up only
1.8 million.
The significant factor here is
that new steel mills are being
put into production in Russia
and the previously non-indust-
rial eastern European countries,
while industrialized wesetrn Eu-
rope is merely stepping-up its
long-established record for high
production.
The Marshall Plan countries ac-
tually have a capacity of 62 million
tons annually with the present fa-
cilities-or approximately 50 per-
cent more than the communist
countries.
* * *
HERE ARE some comparative
figures on other items:
Russia's production of coal
rose from 260 million tons in 19-
50 to 281 million tons in 1951;
western Europe's production was
477.4 million tons in 1950 and
501.6 million tons in 1951.
Production of electric power in
Russia increased from 90 billion
kilowatt hours in 1950 to 103 bil-
lion kilowatt hours in 1951; west-
ern Europe's went from 250 billion
kilowatt hours in 1950 to280 bil-
lion kilowatt hours in 1951.

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NEW YORK- (A) - Everybody
said that Kid Gavilan was a tin-
sel champion, a sort of frothy,
synthetic performer who would
do until a real champion came
along.
He had lost twice to Ray Robin-
son, so he was considered the best
of a poor lot that aspired to the
throne vacated by the Sugar Boy
when he deserted the division to
take over the Middleweight realm.
* *
THE SKEPTICS now are com-
ing around to the idea that may-
be the Kid isn't so bad after all,
and that he is second-grade beef
only in comparison to his prede-
cessor, who after all was one of
the greatest champions the Welt-
ers ever had.
Those who saw him knock out
Gil Turner in vast Municipal
Stadium in Philadelphia Mon-
day night are grudgingly admit-
ting the flat-panned Cuban is
not so bad, after all.
He was up against a kid but a
kid nevertheless who was unde-
feated, who fought with maniacal
fury, and who hit with astonish-
ing speed.
NOW GAVILAN is only 26, but
it is an old 26 as fighting yearsj
go. That is, he's been a campaign-
er for a long time, and has taken
an awful lot of punching around.
He didn't know just what he

was running up against when he
met Turner, but he must have
known that the lad was pretty
good,and he must have realized
'that Gil, at 21, figured to have
tremendous stamina which pos-
sibly he couldn't match.
Consequently, he gave his best
possible performance, a thorough,
workmanlike job of a man who
has learned his trade well.
He's not a great champion by
any means, but, like a journey-
man plasterer who has learned
through long apprenticeship, he
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