THE MICHIGAN DAILY 7°" Wolverine Netmen in Action at MS U; onference Title Chase Starts Today r Former Titlists Retur By GARY WRIGHT Michigan's tennis team has een picked as a pre-meet favorite >r the fiftieth annual Big Ten ennis Championships to be held t Michigan State starting today. Defending champion Iowa and inner-up Illinois should provide! Ve biggest obstacles for the Wol- erines. The Hawkeyes, led by Art ndrews, defending singles cham-' ion, won last year's title by massing 571 /points. Illinois took second with 46%/ rnd Michigan was third with 44%/ oints. 'M' Powerhouse "M" coach Bill Murphy has as- embled another powerhouse ledl y Captain Jon Erickson, Gerry ubie, and Bob Sassone, all un- efeated in conference l play this pring. Also back for the Wolver- ies are Frank Fulton and Wayne eacock, cefending champions in le number five and six singles, espectively. The Michigan number three oubles team of Fulton and John Tiley are unbeaten for the sea- m, having taken eight consecu- i v e matches. Other doubles ams for the Wolverines will be rickson and Dubie in the first oubles and 'Peacock and Larry aitzeff in the second doubles. Michigan, boasting a nine and ae record, has already beaten veryone in the Big Ten but Iowa nd Purdue. "M" stopped the Il- ii in Champaign, 6-3, earlier his spring. Hawkeye Problems The Hawkeyes' trouble is in having only two returning letter- men from the 1958 championship squad. Besides Andrews, Don Middlebrook is the only Iowa holdover. Middlebrook was run- ner-up for the number four singles title in 1958. Last year Andrews teamed with the graduate Bob Potthast to cop the first doubles championship. Leading the Illini will be Cap- tain Al Holtmann. Holtmann was defeated by Erickson 6-1, 8-6, in their meeting earlier this spring. Only 5'6" he is one of the tough- est competitors in Big Ten tennis today. Bob. Breckenridge in the num- ber two position lost to Dubie 6-2, 6-0, but teamed with Holtmann to stop Michigan's number one doubles team of Erickson and Du- bie, 7-5, 6-3. Coach "Howie" Braun of Illi- nois said of his squad, "We'll have a hard time equallinglast year's record, but we should have anoth- er fairly strong team." At the.first of the season he picked Iowa to successfully defend its title, but after seeing the Wolverines defeat his squad with 'little trouble, he r e m a r k e d, "They (Michigan) should win the Big Ten. title easily." Northwestern, last year's fourth place team, has only three return- ing lettermen. "M" stopped the Wildcats in an abbreviated dual meet, 6-1, without the services of Erickson. Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Ohio State were all white-washed by the Wolverinse ins previous meet- ings this spring. Larry Biederman of Ohio State and the Gopher's Dave Healey are their teams' top men in number one singles, but both fell to Erickson. ITashniek1 .-,..._ Captains Swimmers Michigan swimmers last night elected 20-year-old Tony Tash- nick as captain for the 1959-60 season. A native of Detroit, Tashnick graduated from Mackenzie High School in 1956. In his first year of varsity competition for the Wolverines he set the Big Ten, American and NCAA records in the 100 and 200-yd. butterflies. This year, as a Junior, he placed second in the three events he en- tered in the NCAA competition at Ithaca, N. Y., finishing second in the 100 and 200-yd. butterflies and in the 200-yd. medley. The potential medical. student gained All-American mention twice. This season Tashnick turned in his greatest performance at the Big Ten. Championships, taking all three of his events to become one of only two triple winners in the meet. MSU's Bill Steuart was the other. Swim coach Gus Stager, in commentingon .Tashnick's being chosen said, "The kids elected hire. I'm very satisfied." to c ar wE tit In h m w3 se a t] m a h w g L ct UNSEEDED DEFENDER-Pete Stanger, Wolverine hurdler, last year took the Big Ten championship in the 220-yd. low hurdles, but this year his best recorded time of :23.2 puts him fourth in pre-meet ratings. BLACKETT'S STORY: From Caddy to Golfer By HAL APPLEBAUM Seven returning titlists could R urn the Big Ten track and field hampionships into old pro's day. on Included in this veteran group s re three defending champions as h vell asFour seniors, who won the H tle in their respective events a vhen they were sophomores. c After Third in Ro* pi Two champions, Willie May of ndiana in the 120-yard high urdles and Northwestern's Will- or ner Fowler in the 100-yard dash, t 'ill be seeking their third con- fe ecutive championship.li The other defending champions de re Michigan's Pete Stanger in he 220-yard low hurdles, two- c viler Buddy Edelen of Minnesota of nd Illinois' Ernle Haisley in the p igh jumpb Quarter-miler Jesse Nixon of isconsin, Eon Mitchell, high umper from Illinois and Michi- n an's star pole vaulter Eeles n andstrom are the other former s lhampions who will try to reclaim - ;heir lost titles. Lead the Field May and Fowler lead the field f champions, each winning three revious championships. Besides inning the high hurdles the past iwo years May also won the 220- ard low-hurdles in 1957, only to e upset last year by Stanger. Fowler also won the 220-yard ash as a sophomore in 1957 to o along with his consecutive ins in the 100-yard dash. Last 55 n M~i.. won=li51 ear he finished on Mitchell. In the Conferen n performancess on, May rates fi urdles and secon is time of :14 s the favorite t onsecutive high ionship. Threaten Do His time in the mly one-tenth of he best time reco erence this seaso shing him asa ouble win. Stanger, last ye hampion, has re f :23.21 for th laces him fourth ehind May. Conferenc Edelen of Minn ew conferencer he two-mile as a eason, rates as th behind Illinois' ce ratings based so far this sea- rst in the high nd in the lows. establishes him o win his third -hurdle cham- ouble Win low hurdles is a second behind rded in the con- on, thus estab- a threat for a: ar's low hurdles gistered a time Is event which in the ratings e Mark esota, who set a record, winning sophombre last he favorite again this year. His time of 9:06 has been the best recorded in the Big Ten this spring. The Wolverines' Landstrom, out of competition the last two years, will be out to regain' the cham- pionship he won as a sophomore in 1956. Landstrom, on the basis of his performances this spring rates as the favorite. He has con- sistently vaulted over 14'6" this spring with his best effort being a jump of 14'9%" against the Quantico Marines. This effort earned Landstrom the distinction of tying the Ferry Field record. In the high jump the defending champion Haisley and his team- mate and former titleholder Ron Mitchell are expected to battle it out for top honors. Haisley won as a sophomore and Mitchell, who tied for the title back in 1952, be- fore he entered the service, have both jumped 6'73/" ,this spring, giving them a 1%" edge over the next best effort. DAVE LYON SAYS: { Golf Spectators Invited LOCAL STUDENT sport fans willing to sacrifice a weekend of study have the opportunity to be more than sufficiently diverted tomor- row and Saturday. In that two-day stretch, athletes in three different sports will perform here in conjunction with Big Ten Weekend. Most spectator interest will probably center at the Ferry Field track, where Michigan and Illinois are expected to stage their peren- nial battle for outdoor track supremacy. A stone's throw away Michi- gan's baseball team, out of the title running, will attempt to get back into winning ways against Conference opponents Iowa (one game Friday) and Minnesota (two games Saturday, morning and afternoon). Since the Gophers are virtually Big Ten champions and have lost only one game all year, many people should fill the Ferry Field grandstand to see if the Wolverines can beat the leaders. Not so many spectators are likely to show up at tomorrow and Saturday's Big Ten golf meet at the University Course, just south of Ferry Field. This. expected lack of a sizable gallery is unfortunate, because: 1) admission is free to all four sessions (18-hole morning rouin'as at 7:15 each day, followed by 18-hole afternoon rounds for a 72-hole total). 2) this is the first Conference links meet' at Ann Arbor since 1949, and likely the last until 1969. 3) the course, regarded as one of the best collegiate layouts in the nation, is in excellent shape. 4) some of the Midwest's top collegiate golfers are competing. 5) Michigan is one of the favorites for the t'eam title. Spectators will' be welcomed at this two-day affair, because golf is a game of skill, and the golfers would like to have somebody besides themselves and a handful of other people present to appreciate this skill. In fact, admission is so free that you don't even have to show IDs. Big Ten meets rotate from school to school, so Michigan's turn comes up once every 10 years. The last time the Wolverines hosted the Conference golf meet, they proved inhospitable hosts, winning the tournament by a whopping 58 strokes. It took Michigan's five best men only 1,499 shots to negotiate the 72-hole route that year. Those five men placed among the Conference's seven best. Tougher Than Usual .. . It doesn't look like any team will come close to that 1,499 total this year, because the always-difficult Michigan course has been toughened even further in preparation for the Big Ten meet. The fairways have been narrowed. The roughs have been allowed to grow, and yesterday's rain will induce the grass in the roughs to grow even higher. The tees have been moved back on many of the holes, so now the course measures a long 6,925 yards. Two hundred new trees have been planted, some in strategic places along the fairways. The wet weather should probably make the greens "slow," to further test the ability and raise the scores of the competitors. Those golfers who should most' likely do well on the improved Michigan course include Purdue's Jon Konsek, last year's medalist with a 72-hole score of 293 at Ohio State. Konsek should be supported ably by. teammate Gene Francis, fourth in 1958 with 298. These two will lead their squad's attempt to retain the Conference team title. Another of the five teams expected to make as run for the cham- pionship is Indiana, led by Ron Royer and Jon Sommer. Royer was sixth in last year's individual standings with 301. Michigan State, paced by Ty Caplin, is also a strong contender. Michigan should also be considered in the running. Coach Bert Katzenmeyer's team has fared well against Indiara, Purdue, and MSU in dual meets this season. Although losing to the Spartans and Hoosiers on points, Michigan has beaten all three in total strokes in meets on this course. Katzenmeyer, whose Wolverine teams won Big Ten crowns in 1947, 1949, and 1952, will depend this weekend on a squad composed of three seniors (Capt. Ray Lovell, Chuck Blackett, and Pat Keefe), one junior (Larry Markman), and two sophomores (Dick Youngberg and Joe Brisson). Spectators have the alternative of either following one group of golfers around the course, or of standing in one of many vantage points where-they can watch all the competitors play representative holes. Probably the best point is the hilltop where one can watch golfers holing out on greens 1, 8, and 15, and then teeing off on 2, 9, and 16. Or they might stand between the 11th and 12th fairways and watch the linksmen try futilely to match par on the tough, par-4, 470-yard 11th hole. Phone NO 2-4786 PA for Michigan Daily GLF RANGE. Classified Ads On U.S-23 - South Of Packard Rd. ---------- ------------------------------..------ rr By CLIFF MARKS "I was one of the boys whol graduated from the caddy ranks," said Chuck Blackett, reminiscing about his golf career. The lanky senior was sitting in the clubhouse yesterday watching a heavy downpour pelt the Uni- versity course on which he and his Michigan teammates will try to capture the Big Ten title this weekend. Blackett, who has been medal- ist for the Wolverines in three meets this year, is used to win- ning. He was Ann Arbor City Champion last summer in a tour- nament played on the same Uni- versity course. Grew Up Here Actually, Blackett has grown up on the beautiful Michigan course, first caddying there and later playing on it for Ann Arbor High School and now for Michi- gan. "The course is in fine shape, especially the greens. It certainly' is a championship test, but a fair one." While playing three years for Ann Arbor High, Blackett won the Regional title as a senior, and his team was runner-up twice in the state tournament. "They have never lost the regionals," he re- marked, referring to his alma mater. Blackett also won the State Jaycee Tourney in 1952, and went to the National Championship at Duke University, where he did not fare so well. Third Varsity Year An engineering student here at the University, Blackett is in his third year of varsity competition for Bert Katzenmeyer's golf team. This. stint was,broken up when Blackett went into the Army for two years after his sophomore season. He was on Okinawa from 1955-57, then returned to the links last year. "I didn't have a club in my hand for the whole two years," he said. In speaking of the upcoming TONY TASHNICK ... new captain Improper? FLORENCE, S.C. (R) -- The Florence Morning 'News will- publish the American League standings upside down tomor- row. In a story The News explains there is. "something unreal and improper" about the New York Yankees occupying the bottom spot. By reversing the standings, The News says the Yanks will. be taking the normal position they "no doubt will occupy be- fore the end of the season." Conference Meet, Blacket said o that the other nine teams have a p psychological advantage, "Be- w cause we have to go to classes t' Thursday (today) and they don't. y But," he added, "we naturally b have the home course edge." It is ironic that Blackett will be d teeing off Friday in a Big Ten g golf meet on the same course that w he caddied on exactly ten years ago in another Big Ten Meet. Hal of Fa-me{ For ''Men} By MIKE GILLMAN Two more names were added to the ever-growing list of Michigan' immortals who have made the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame. Former Wolverine coaches Matt Mann and Ray Fisher were yes- terday named to that select group by a vote of the state sports edi- tors and sports broadcasters. Other Michigan men who have been so honored are Willie Hes- ton, Fielding Yost, and Bennie Oosterbaan of football fame, and Eddie Tolan, star Wolverine track- man of the early 1930's. Former wearers of the Maize and Blue now number six of the 25 who have been selected since the inception of the Hall in 1955. Mann was the Wolverine swim- ming coach for a period of 29 years. Under his tutelage, Michi- gan swam to 15 Big Ten titles and 13 NCAA championships. He is now coach at Oklahoma Univer- sity. Chosen with Mann was another long-time Michigan coach, Fisher. When Fisher handed over the reins of the baseball team to cur- rent' mentor, Don Lund, 'he was finishing 38 years as coach here. Over that period he matched Mann's 15 Big Ten swimming titles with 15 Conference diamond crowns. He also took the NCAA championship once. Also chosen in yesterday's poll were Mrs. Marion Ladewig, (the first woman to be honored) wo- man bowler of the year seven times, and winner of more nation- al titles than any other wombn in bowling. Others included Stanley Ketch- el, former middleweight champion of the world, and Dr. Allen Stowe, tennis coach at Kalamazoo Col- lege for 32 years, who were hon- ored posthumously. Last chosen was Dutch Clark, an early Detroit Lion player and coach, who was six times named ,all pro-quarterback. Ki FOR Lgh t ig h t a§ -,- All the comfort of genuine moccasin construction adapted to an oxford for you who prefer a close fit at the ankle. Top quality leather and exclusive two-way seam assures extra durability with full freedom $ 95 for the foot. *T.M. Rag. 2#P3SOUTDOOR FOOTWUtI/ AVAN BOVEN SOE 4 . .17 Nickels Arcade EELES LANgDSTROM .. .things are looking up DISTINCTIVE HAIRSTYLING to please you! S 10 BARBERS t NO WAITING * AIR-CONDITIONED The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre U I Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland Chicago Baltimore Kansas City Washington Boston Detroit New York W L 21 11 22 13 20 15 15 16 17 20 13 19 13 20 12 19 Pet. GB .656 - ~.629 1l2 .571 21/2 .484° "512 .459 61/2 .406 8 .394 81/2 .387 811 NATIONAL LEAGUE; W" L Pct. GB Milwaukee 3 2 11 .656 - San Francisco 19 16 .543 3% Chicago 20 17 .541 31/ Los Angeles 20 18 .526 4 Cincinnati 18 17 .514 41/a Pittsburgh 1518 .455 6 St. Louis 14 20 .412, 8 Philadelphia 11 21 .344 10 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 6, Milwaukee 3 St. Louis 11,' Pittsburgh 1 Chicago 7, Philadelphia 5 Los Angeles 8, Cincinnati 4 (first game) (Cincinnati leads 7-1 in third inn- ing of second game.) TODAY'S 'GAMES Pittsburgh at St. Louis (N) +Philadelphia at Chicago I YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 5, Washington 3 Detroit 13, New York 6 Kansas City 8, Boston 2 Chicago 5, Baltimore. 2 TODAY'S GAME Kansas City at Boston (Only game scheduled) I I Washable Knit Shirts.. f Cotton Orion ... $2.98, $3.98 0 .. $4.95 ii SUITS for Summer wear 16.95 to 45.00 Bermudas Wash &Wear from $2.98 Fabrics PLAIDS Headquarters for Michigan sportswear.. Jackets and sweatshirts with the official MICHIGAN Seal SOLIDS 1! s .4 f d II 11 II IBM l I .I