rj"[HE 3I1CHI AN DAILY PAGE 15 Wolverines Qualify or ienTrackMeet Finals Today Ward Is Star; Hoosiers Takej Only_8 Places Ohio State Second With 12Qualifiers; Egleston Ties Keller In Hurdles (Continued from Page 1) performances, but giving the spec- tators more to look at. Summaries: Broad Jump-John Brooks, Chi- cago, 24 feet 5 3-4 inches. Willis Ward, Michigan, 23 feet 8 1-8 inches. A. 0. Adams, Illinois, 23 feet 7 1-8 inches. Jones, Wisconsin, 22 feet 9 1-4 inches. Hllis, Purdue, 22 feet 8 5-8 inches. Ollie Duggins, Northwestern, 22 feet 7 3-4 inches. 100-yard dash-Hudson Hellmich, Illinois; Walter Stapf, Ohio State; Willis Ward and Cass Kemp, Mich- igan; Harold Thompton, Minnesota; John Brooks, Chicago. Best time, :10, by Hellmich, Stapf and Ward. 440-yard run-Ivan Fuqua and B. D. Harpold, Indiana; Charles De- Baker and Tom Ellerby, Michigan; Maurice Teitelbaum and William Arnold, Ohio State; David McQueen, Purdue; G. E. Jones, Illinois. Best time, :50 by Fuqua and Teitelbaum., 880-yard run-(Around four turns) --Charles Hornbostel and DeNeese, Indiana; Edward Lemen and Edwin Turner, Michigan; Robert Brown, Ohio State; George Farley, North- western. Best time, 1:55 by Hornbos- tel. 120-yard high hurdles-Jack Kel- ler, Ohio State; Willis Ward, Hawley Egleston and Boyd Pantlind, Michi- gan Charles Schaefley, Minnesota; Kenneth Sandbach, Purdue. Best time, :14.9 by Keller and Egleston. 220-yard low hurdles-(around one turn)-John Brooks, Chicago; Ollie Duggins, Northwestern; . Jack Keller,, Ohio State; Hawley Egleston and Charles DeBaker, Michigan; Charles Schaefley, Minnesota. Best time, :24 .7 by Brooks. Shot put-A. C. Kamm, Illinois, 47 feet 1-8 inches; George Neal, Ohio State, 45 feet 9 1-2 inches; David Cook, Illinois, 44 feet 9 inches; Noble Biddinger, Indiana, -44 feet 10 3-4 inches; Ray Blumenfeld, Michigan, 44 feet 10 inches; Mario Pacetti, Wis- consin, -43 feet 9 1-2 inches. 220-yard dash - (around one turn)-liudson Hellmich and R. M. Kennicott, Illinois; Ivan Fuqua, In- diana;Cass Kemp, Michigan; Harold Thompton, Minnesota; Walter Stapf, Ohio State. Best time, :21.8 by Fu- qua. Five-A League Meet To Be Here Today Four of the Five-A League schools will compete in the an- nual track meet to be held today at Ferry Field. Ann Arbor, Lan-3 sing Eastern, Lansing Central, and Battle Creek have entered teams, with Jackson alone not competing. Preliminaries in all events and finals innthe pole vault will be held in the morning with all other finals beginning at 1:30 in the afternoon. Ann Arbor, 1932 win- ners, will enter the meet the un- derdogs with Lansing Eastern fa- vored to take the title. General admission for the aft- ernoon finals will be 25 cents and 15 cents for University students. Eleven Co-ed Teams Left In Ball League Of the 28 teams which started, only 11 are left in the competition for the Women's Intramural Base- ball Cup. The others have been elim- inated during the last two weeks' struggle to get up on schedule again. The 11 contenders for the title are Alpha Epsilon Phi, Sorosis 1, Sorosis 3, Chi Omega, Mosher, Jor- dan, Zeta Tau Alpha, Tri Delt, Martha Cook, Theta Phi Alpha, and Helen Newberry. The original plans for the tourna- ment included three weeks of round- robin play but because of the bad weather which held things up, it has been necessary to swing into the straight elimination series. BIG TEN STANDINGS W. L. Pct. Illinois............7 1 .875 MICHIGAN ........5 1 .833 Minnesota .........5 1 .833 Indiana ...........3 2 .600 Wisconsin..........4 3 .571 Northwestern .......3 4 .429 Purdue ............ 2 3 .400 Iowa .............. 1 3 .250 Ohio State .........0 5 .000 Chicago ...........0 7 .000 Results Michigan 9, Purdue 1. Minnesota 7, Northwestern 3. Games Today Michigan at Illinois. Northwestern at Minnesota. Wisconsin at Iowa. Purdue at Chicago. Golfers To Play 36 Holes In Theta Chi Wins Preparation For Bi Ten Meet Season's I,M. PiAY Aa PV.D I AY All members of Michigan's Varsity I A Wolverine also captured the in- golf squad except Johnny Fischer dividual title when Fischer averaged will play 36 holes over the University 75.7 strokes for four rounds for a course today in order to develop total of 303, five strokes better than stamina for the gruelling Conference Larson, of Minnesota. Larson will be meet Tuesday and Wednesday, as bark this year looking for revenge well as to give Coach T. C. Trueblood for himself and his team. a further basis on which to select The Michigan team played over the two men who with Fischer and the Killdeer course, scene of the Ed Dayton will defend the Wolver- Conference meet, sonie weeks ago ines' Big Ten title. when they defeated the Northwest- Fischer left this morning for Ev- ern divot-diggers, 16 to 2. Judging anston where the meet is to be held, from results then, when they turned while Dayton is sure of making the in a gross score very close to last trip. It is probably that Trueblood year's winning total, the Wolverines, will select the other two from a like the Wildcat course and are set group made up of Carrol Sweet, to defend their crown against all Captain Alex Jolly, Cal Markham comers. and George David. Dayton appears capable of bet- Fischer, Dayton and Jolly played tering the 315 he shot last year, and on the team that last year won the the other two men selected should title over the University of Minne- equal the 312, 318 scores chalked up sota's new course at Minneapolis, by Captain Lenfesty and Jolly, since turning a total of 1,248 strokes for all of the regular Varsity players the four-man team, each man play- have been shooting in the middle ing 72 holes. 70's. Fraternity Title Alpha Kappa Lambda Is Runner-Up After Being Winner For Two Years For the first time in three years a -By AL NEWMAN r Tigers Come From ebind To Beat Boston BOSTON, May 19.--UP)-Despite the fact that three former Detroit Tigers scored five runs for the Red Sox this afternon, in the opening game of the series, Bucky Harris' pack knocked over the Hose, 7 to 5, and, what's best of all, cane from behind to do it. The Tigers spotted Dusty Rhodes and the Sox a 3 to 0 lead in the first two frames, but climbed aboard Dusty for three runs and a tie in the Detroit fifth, getting them all after two were out. The real breaking point of the contest was the four-run seventh. Ray Hayworth started it with a walk. Jonathan Stone, feeling a bit under the weather, had been allowed to watch proceedings, but here was in- serted as a pinch hitter for Pitcher Fred Marberry, and got a single to right which put Ray on third. When Harry Davis followed with a fierce double into the right field cor- ner of the yard, both mates tallied and out went Rhodes, the starting Boston flinger and in came Paul An- drews. Charley Gehringer and Ger- ald Walker got hits off handsome Paul before the frame was over and MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. New York..........18 9 Cleveland........... 18 13 Washington......... 18 13 Chicago............16 12 Philadelphia........13 14 Detroit.............12 16 St. Louis...........12 19 Boston.............. 8 19 Detroit 7, Boston 5. New York 6, St. Louis 5. Philadelphia 9, Cleveland 2. Chicago 10, Washington 1. NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pittsburgh ..........19 9 New York .......... 17 10 Brooklyn ...........13 11 St. Louis...........15 15 Cincinnati ..........14 14 Boston.............15 17 Chicago............12 17 Philadelphia ........9 21 Boston 5, Pittsburgh 3. Philadelphia 5, Cincinnati 4. Brooklyn-Chicago, rain. Pct. .667 .581 .581 .571 .481 .429 .387 .296 Pet. .679 .630 .542 .500 .500 .469 .414 .300 J in- new champion is to be crowned in{ the fraternity Intramural competi- tion. Theta Chi, winners in 1927 andc 1930, will displace Alpha Kappa Lambda, who have won for the past1 two seasons in the competition which will end with the running off of the, horseshoe, tennis and baseball tour-1 neys. A.K.L., contender until itsr elimination during the past week. was runner-up. Theta Chi swept the water compe- tition for three championships, in the dual meets, the Interfraternitya meet and repeated its last year's win+ to take the Water Polo title. The Theta Chi's also took first in the Sigma Delta Psi tests. Phi Beta Delta was the second team to go into the quarter finals of the softball competition with a 2-1 win over Acacia Thursday afternoon. Fishman, pitching for the winners, turned in fine pitching as did Hutch- inson of Acacaia, although the latter was handicapped by poor support. Phi Lamba Kappa has already ad- vanced to the semi-finals. The fraternity champions of the year in all events but tennis, horse- shoes and baseball follow: Basketball "A" .....Alpha Delta Phi Basketball "B"...........Sigma Chi Bowling .......... Alpha Chi Sigma Cross Country...........Phi Kappa Foul Throwing Alpha Kappa Lamba Handball .:.... Tau Kappa Epsilon Relays .............. Phi Beta Delta Sigma Delta Psi ......... Theta Chi Speedball.....Alpha Kappa Lamba Swimming (Dual Meets) . .Theta Chi Swimming .............. Theta Chi Track .... ...........Theta Xi Volleyball .....Alpha Kappa Lamba Water Polo .............. Theta Chi Wrestling ...........Tau Delta Phi ANOTHER DIAMOND MADISON, Wis., May 19.-(P)- Toni Jones, veteran Wisconsin track coach, proved his aptitude for prog- nosticating track meet scores when he figured the Wisconsin-Marquette outcome would be 77 to 63, Marquette winning. The actual final score was 76 1-4 to 63 3-4! These Outboards rTHE ROUGHEST RIDE in the world! That's how they charac- terize the 132-mile grind down the Hudson River in the annual classic for outboard hydroplanes. Last Sun- day, Bill Feldhusen, Staten Island mechanic, won the race by a margin of 29 seconds over J. C. Walier. The piston-displacement disparity between the two power plants was something like 20 cubic inches, but each power class was given a set handicap this year in order to even things up. The victor averaged just over 40 miles per hour. It is a rough ride. Motors weighI only slightly over a hundred pounds, pilots around one-sixty, while the hulls themselves weigh a scant two hundred. So we have a total weight of less than 500 pounds bouncing merrily over the Hudson's choppy surface at 40 miles per hour, pro- pelled by an engine turning over madly at 5,000 revolutions per min- ute, or around 90 to the second. To each revolution there is one explo- sion. There is a lot of luck connected with that race. Collision with the Hudson flotsam and jetsam, includ- ing everything from orange crates to automobile tires, account for many contestants. Just 28 out of 65 starters finished the race. In addi- tion to that there are gasoline mis- calculations to figure in. Drivers have been known to run out of gas only a half mile from the finish line. * * * tractingdcupful of water in the face now and then. First there is the steady and deep note of the exhaust, the pitch of which can tell the experinced driver whether the needle valve is allowing the engine sufficient fuel, and wheth- er the timer is rightly placed. Then there is a multitude of demonaical shrieks and whistles simply from the flywheel tearing away at a 40-mile gale made by the boat's forward mo- tion. Under the driver's right hand the bow deck is vibrating at a great rate. That is the note of the gears driving the boat. Suddenly the motor screams as an automobile engine would if at, full [speed the clutch were pushed in. The propeller has hit a sunken ob- ject and the soft metal pin in the lower unit has broken, releasing the drive from the power unit. Off goes the motor which takes a full 15 sec- onds to stop after its mad whirl, and a precious three minutes is spent renewing the pin. So on again to the bruising, nerve-wracking grind with the knowledge that you have the worst case of windburn in two continents. After three hours of bouncing, wind, and noise, the finish line is within a mile. A crash, as a sunken snag is encountered, the hull is punctured and boat and motor go "helldiving," while you take a bath. Nevertheless, it's sport, and you'll be back next year all ready to beat the other fellow. wO-CYCLE ENGINES are cranky affairs in general, and the out- board is no exception to the rule. To run a f ast outboard successfully re- quires ano ear attuned to all the little engine noises through the incessant blam-blam of the hull battering away at the waves, the swish of the spray falling on all sides and a dis- DAVIS CUP TEAM WINNERS COLUMBUS, O., May 19.--HMMH MONTREAL, May 19.--P)-George M. Lott, Jr., and John Van Ryn, the United States doubles team, today defeated Marcel Rainville and Dr. Jack Wright, of Montreal, 6-1, 6-3, 6-3, in the third match of their Davis Cup series to clinch the North Amer- ican Zone final and qualify to play Argentina at Washington, D. C., next week. St. Lours3, nings). that accounts which put the the pack. New York 7 (10 Victoria Venetian Blinds Add Comfort and Beauty to Your Home Let Us Estimate the Cost Of These Blinds for Your Home OSWALD A. HERA 112 West Washington Street for the four runsg game in the cage for its inic 0l dfittiC hf cy piKR &COMP n ToiNK 1 unishings an 'Tailorin,9ili Street SOLIS OSUN Weather is abo ga coop a ossibe. 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