I9:i6 FOUR T CHIG.AN' DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 24. FOUR TUE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1950 Gene from the STDELINES by Dick Cramer w, i Re dlegs Tin on Temple 's Key Hi t t Vltp Sa! Politics vs. SportsJ POLITICS AND SPORTS are mixing again and an explosion can be expected at any time. Governor Goodwin Knight of California has intervened twice in the past ten days in the boiling Pacific Coast Conference football controversy. It seems certain that his intervention will have some effect. The PCC has been torn by a terrific row over rules governingt financial aid to players. Four schools-Washington, Southern Cali- fornia, UCLA and California-have been .crippled by heavy finesa and ineligibility decrees against players who accepted aid in excess of conference regulations. These regulations have been denounced as being much too stringent for teams that must compete with the top grid powers in the nation. To the rescue of his California schools at least (Washington wasn't his concern) has come Knight in shining armor (pardon the irresistable pun.) He first gave support to "any move" by Stanford, USC, UCLA and California to withdraw from the PCC and to create an intra-state athletic league. While that idea was still making the rounds, Knight stoked the fire some more late last week. He claimed to reporters that his alma mater, unindicted Stanford, was also guilty of violating the outmoded PCC rules. Knight's purpose undoubtedly was to show how ridiculous the rules are. He wanted to demonstrate that all schools were ignoring the conference code and that making its provisions less strict was smarter than trying to punish all violators. Two Possible Reactions... JUDGING BY PAST instances of politics entering the sports world, there are two possible reactions that could stem from Knight's intervention. His advice might be taken or he might be told to stop interfering lest his political prestige nosedive. So far, there have been indications of both reactions. The Presi- dents Council of the PCC has given signs of reducing the penalties already meted out and of reappraising the eligibility code. At the same time, Stanford, irritated by Knight's accusations against it, has sought to disprove the charges. Stanford has made it obvious that it would appreciate silence from its alumnus in the future. The final outcome of this controversy is still in doubt. But the meeting of sports and politics recalls other similar situations. Some- times, the politicians have had their way, but other times they have had to beat a hasty retreat in the face of sports world counter- attacks. Back around the beginning of the century a fellow named Teddy Roosevelt made a deep penetration into sports realms from his office of the Presidency. He was concerned with the faults of football-not from professionalism, but from physical dangers to the players. Many gridders were being killed and Teddy called for a "cleanup" of the sport or else. Roosevelt had some prestige at the time, so football complied, rather than fight back. The forward pass was legalized and other rules were passed to lessen hard body contact. On the other hand, only last year the Georgia legislature moved to forbid its pride and joy, Georgia Tech, from meeting Pitt in the Sugar Bowl. These honorable (?) men didn't approve of the interracial form of the contest-Pitt had some Negroes on the team. Victory for Sports.. .. HERE, FORTUNATELY, the 'sports world fought back with success. Opposition to, the measure from students of Georgia Tech was joined by nation-wide condemnation and the politicians decided not to take action. (It's hoped from this sideline that the same turn of events will move to destroy Louisiana's new law of the same anti- democratic nature.) Horse racing and boxing have been favorites of politicians who wanted to get tied up with sports. Hardly a year goes by that an investigation.into boxing isn't attempted in some state and many states have the issue of whether to have horse racing as one of their key election-time controversies. These are two areas where the politi- cos have the upper hand. They can control the fate of these sports in their states. Then there's baseball, which is less controllable. That's one sport that our public servants are smart to ignore-but not too much. Eisen3hower found that he had to throw out the first ball of the season if he wanted to remain a public idol. Politicians should be interested in baseball, but may not attack it. Congressmen have had the audacity to question whether baseball players' services to their country in the armed forces was sufficient, but these Congressmen have soon learned their lessons. An attack on any major leaguerdraws rebuttal from all of base- .ball and that's a lot of rebuttal. The Representative who cast asper- sions on Hank Bauer's war record, for instance, soon found it advis- able to retract his statements. The result of a politics-sports mixture is fairly unpredictable. All that can be foreseen is that something interesting will happen. Keep your eye on California. T 1. 0se .E l1 1 X ' V xhibtio Ti.t '1jT.f4-- T igers Lose Exhibition T"ilt SPORTS SHORTS: Flam, Miss Fry Capture Tennis Titles By The Associated Press CINCINNATI-Second baseman Johnny Temple singled Bob Thur- man home from second with the winning run in the eighth inning last night for a 4-3 Cincinnati Redleg win over Pittsburgh's Pirates. Brooks Lawrence collected his, 14th win of the season, after yielding only one hit in a two-} inning relief stint. * ,c * A's 3, White Sox 2 CHICAGO-Back home after a disastrous road trip in which they won only two of 11 games, the Chicago White Sox found Com- iskey Park held no cure for their slump and bowed to the Kansas City Athletics, 3-2, last night. Hector Lopez' two-out two-run single in the second inning pro- duced Kansas City's first two runs and Vic Power drove in what proved to- be the winning run off starting White Sox hurler Jim Wilson in the third. * * * Giants 11, Tigers 10 COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. -Dusty Rhodes' second homer of the day, with Foster Castleman on base in the 12th inning, gave the New York Giants an 11-10 victory over Detroit yesterday in the annual Hall of Fame exhibition game played at Doubleday Field. JOHNNY TEMPLE ..singles also win games HECTOR LOPEZ . . . ruins Sox home-coming Mantle Eyes Bat Crowns NEW YORK (A) -- Mickey Mantle, the New York Yankees' switch-hitting outfielder, hopes to become the American League's first triple crown winner since Boston's Ted Williams in 1947. Mantle stands an excellent chance of accomplishing the feat. He currently leads the league in batting with .371, home runs with 32 and runs batted in with 82. In the National League batting race, Cincinnati's Ed Bailey has displaced Stan Musial of St. Louis as the pacesetter. Bailey's average is .344 and Milwaukee's Hank Aaron moved into second, ahead of Musial, with .336. Musial's third at .334. Ted Kluszewski of Cincinnati is tops in home run production with 24 and Musial heads the runs batted in department with 73. By The Associated Press CHICAGO - Wimbledon cham- pion Shirley Fry and hard-hitting' Herb Flam wontthe women and men's singles titles yesterday in the National Clay Courts Tennis tournaments at suburban River Forest. Miss Fry defeated Althea Gib- son, New York City, 7-5, 6-1, and Flam edged Ed Moylan, Trenton, N. J., 3-6, 6-3, 1-6, 6-3, 6-3. Miss Fry of St. Petersburg, Fla. rallied from a 5-2 deficit to win her match. Flam of Beverly Hills, Calif., also had to come from be- hind to win. The men's match was a see-saw battle from the outset until the 32-year-old Moylan tired. * * * Heart Troubles for Louis CHICAGO-Joe Louis, who held the heavyweight boxing title long- er than any other man, got a bad belt from fate yesterday. Louis, 42, beset by income tax troubles and trying to make some money at a wrestling career, was ruled inacceptable by the Illinois' Athletic Commission because a commission physician reported he has a damaged heart. Dr. Irving Slott in an interview said the former champion has car- diac contusion, or damage to one of the layers of the heart. He said it would require some time and subsequent examination to deter- mine whether the damage is tem- porary or permanent. Dr. Slott, in a report to the com- mission said an "abnormal electro- cardiograph makes it necessary for Louis to restrict his physical activ- ities for the .present." The physician recommended that Louis not be permitted to wrestle for six months. Then, he said; if Louis still wants to wrestle, "he should be re-examined for re- evaluation regarding further dis- position." * * * New Hall of Fame Members COOPERSTOWN, N. Y:-Hank Greenberg and Joe Cronin were formally indicted into baseball's Hall of Fame yesterday in impres- sive ceremonies held under cloudy skies before the museum on main street. After the morning induction, the big crowd of about 8,500 moved down the street to watch an ex- hibition game between the New York Giants and Detroit Tigers in the village where Abner Doubledayt is said to have invented haseball many years ago. Both Cronin and Greenberg, Cleveland Indians' general man- ager, were elected to the Hall of Fame in January by the 10-year members of the Baseball Writers Association. Cronin, 49, collected 2,285 hits during his active big league career that started with Pittsburgh in 1926 and ended in Boston in 1945. He managed Washington to a pen- nant in 1933 and won with the Red Sox in 1946. A righthanded batter who was born in Sanz Fran- cisco, Cronin finished with a life- time .302 average. Greenberg, 45, hit 58 homers in 1938. He finished his career with 311 homers and a lifetime batting average of .313. Major League Standings e * Mackinac Boat Race MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. - Fleetwood, a 38-foot, class D yawl out of Chicago, appeared last night a certain winner of the over-all championship in the 49th Chicago- to-Mackinac Island sailing race up Lake Michigan. The Fleetwood, owned by Chi- cagoan Dick Geib, was one of only six boats which had finished the 333-mile haul, but it had the best handicap time of any of them. Only two others among the fleet of 64 which set sail from Chicago Saturdaj were in sight off the is- land and the wind was dying with the day at 6 p.m. . , . Giovanelli Wins Fight NEW YORK-Danny Giovanelli of New York got up off the floor 1 midwau in the eighth and punched. out a technical knockout over Gene Poirier of Niagara Falls, N.Y., be- fore the round was over in a scheduled 10-round televised, bout at St. Nick's Arena last night. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet GB New York 61 29 .678 - Cleveland 50 37 .575 9% 4 Boston 49 39 .557 11 Chicago 45 40 .529 13V2 Baltimore 40 48 .455 20 Detroit 39 49 .443 21 Washington 36 55 .396 25!z Kansas City 33 56 .371 27% TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Detroit (2 tWi-night) New York at Chicago (N) Washington at Cleveland (N) Boston at Kansas City (N) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct1 Milwaukee 53 32 .624 Cincinnati 52 36 .591 Brooklyn 48 39 .552 St. Louis 42 45 .483 Pittsburgh 40 46 .465 Chicago 39 46 .459 Philadelphia 40 49 .449 New York 31 52 .373 TODAY'S GAMES GB 2 6 12 13/ 14~ 15 21 Milwaukee at New York (N) Cincinnati at Brooklyn (N) St. Louis at Philadelphia (N) Chicago at Pittsburgh (N) a ~ K roll, Burke Cop PGA Semi-Finals, Compete Today for Totrney Crown DO YOU WEAR GLASSES? See the New Type, Tiny, Plastic, Inyisible, Fluidless CONTACT LENSES Safe and practical for work and play. Write or phone for a free bopklet about contact lenses or drop in for a free demonstration. BETTER VISION CENTER 706 Wolverine Bldg.-4th and Washington Sts. Ann Arbor Phone NO 8-6019 5Ji o V a RESTAURANT Foods" Full banquet facilities in our Pine Room OPEN 11 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT 1322 Washtenaw, Ypsilanti Ypsilanti 9353 -4 CANTON, Mass. (RP) - Masters titlist Jackie Burke Jr., and ex- infantrymcan Ted Kroll, seeking his first big golfing win, roared into the finals of the Professional Golfers Association Championship yesterday. They will clash over 36 holes to- day for the title. Burke, five down at one stage, marshaled a late afternoon rally with a fantastic string of birdies and stood off a counter rally to smash the hopes of Ed Furgol, the incredible former National Open Champion who plays with just a crooked left arm, one up on the 37th hole. Wins Extra Hole Burke, a 33-year-old Houston pro, missed a six-foot eagle putt on the 36th, but he sank a 12-foot birdie putt on the first extra hole for a spectacular victory. Kroll, 37, completely smothered 31-year-old Bill Johnston, the tourney dark horse from Provo, Utah, 10 and 8, in the other semi- final over the Blue Hill Country Club course. Kroll, a veteran from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., moved to a six- hole lead at the end of the morn- ing round and never let up. Furgol Misses Putt On the 37th hole of Burke's match, the fighting Furgol was on the green 30 feet from the pin and made a bold stab for his putt but failed. Burke had won five straight holes -- 24th through the 28th - in a phenomenal hot streak to go ahead by two holes which Furgol cut to one at the 30th. One down with just two holes to play, Furgol leveled the match with a great recovery shot from the rough on the 35th where Burke trapped his second. Then Furgol halved the 36th with two remarkable recovery shots when it appeared Burke might snare an eagle three. No Major Crowns Kroll, wounded four times while fighting as an infantry sergeant on the beaches of Anzio and the thickest battles of France, never has won a major championship. His one-sided. victory came close to being the most thorough ever administered in the PGA Cham- pionship. Johnston was able to win only three holes of the 28 played, and only one during the muggy after- noon. Kroll closed him out on the 428- yard 28th. Johnston never has won a tournament outside his own state. gBuy Now For Christmas ALL WOOD ARTICLES .. 50% off ALL INDIAN BRASS ...... 40% off Trays, vases, etc. ALL IVORY ...... ........ 30% off All other merchandise 20% off INDIA ART SHOP 330 Maynard Street 4 SOFTBALL LAST NIGHT: Hornets' Plassman Pitches I-M No-Hitter Not one man reached second base as Hornet pitcher Harold Plassman hurled a no-hitter against Psychology 'C' in last night's I-M softball action at South Ferry Field. By winning, 8-0, the undefeated Hornets remained on top of the League Two standings. Plassman gave up only two walks and fanned seven as he pitched the Hornets to their fifth win. Undefeated Hospital maintained its lead in League One by edging Bacteriology, 6-4. Hospital scored its runs in the first four innings and had to withstand a late inn- ing rush by Bacteriology. The losers scored two runs in the fifth and had bases loaded in the bot- tom of the sixth, but could only muster one run. Med Sox pitcher Maury Math- ews shut out Psychology 'B' on three hits and struck out seven as his team romped to an 11-0 win. A grand slam home run by Bill Roth highlighted the Sox' eight- run second inning. Herman Nienhaus' two-run blast in the last of the sixth inn- ing broke a two-two tie and gave Alpha Chi Sigma walked over Hardrocks a 4-2 victory over BDA. winless Mathematics for its sec- Chemistry scored eight runs in ond win against three losses. Math the top of the first inning and took a 3-0 lead in the top of the then outlasted Pharmacology for first, but the winners pulled ahead the remainder of its contest to to stay in their half of the inning win, 11-9. with six runs. U- I I Cleaning Bargains Give us one week to process and from the regular cleaning price we will give you 25% OFF ARMEN CLEANERS Main Plant, 630 S. Ashley; Branch, 619 Packard Store Hours: 7:30 A.M. to 7 P.M. Phone NO 3-4131 LADIES' SKIRTS ormerly to NOW 6.50 $465 and 8.95 $565 4 I F I Ui INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION presents A .. qw W. AW I1 II I