AY, 22, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverines Defeat Wildcats In --, {t; ___ Golfers Shut ; Out Spartans, In First Meet Kocsis Shoots 73 To Win Medal Honors Ahead Of Dayton And L. David By BILL REED University of Michigan golfers opened the spring home sports sched- ule yesterday by administering a complete rout to the Michigan State team on the University course. The Wolverines swept all three foursome matches and all six singles matches for a 27 point total, while the Spartans failed to garner a point. Chuck Kocsis, State amateur champion playing number one for the Wolverines, toox medal honors with 36-37 for a 73, one over par. Captain Eddie Dayton and the soph- omore Larry David each took 77 and Cal Markham turned in a 38-40 card for a 78 total. Woody Malloy with 82 and Carroll Sweet with 87 completed the Wolver- ine team. Mueller, Spartan number one, led the visitors with a 40-44 card for 84, Eddie Riordan taking 85 for the next best score. The Wolverine golfers will open the Conference dual meet season on the University course next Saturday, meeting Northwestern. The meet, originally scheduled for later in the season, is expected to be one of the closest on the schedule as the Wild- cats, with Minnesota, have been picked to extend the Wolverines in their defense of Big Ten honors. The course, open for play since Wednesday, was in first class shape, despite early spring rains. Spring And A Maid Bring Hefty Heave Who was the unidentified young woman who pesterday so inspired "Skip" Etchells, star sophomore discus man, that he tossed the platter on a special exhibition heave two feet farther than his previous best throw of the after- noon? Etchells had just finished his last official throw in the discus trials when the feminine element entered the picture. The crowd parted, affording the aforemen- tioned young lady an unobstructed view of the throwing ring, Etchells spun around, and the discus sailed through the air to land two feet beyond the previous best mark. Cantrill Appointed Union Line Coach SCHENECTADY, N. Y., April 21.- ()- Cecil E. Cantril, Jr., guard on Michigan's Big Ten championship teams in 1931 and 1932, and Arthur C. Lawrence, outstanding center on Purdue's eleven last fall, have been appointed line coaches to assist Prof. G. Elliott Hatfield, head coach of football at Union College. Johnny Fischer Leaves For Foreign Golf Wars Johnny Fischer, Wolverine golf star who left school in February to join the American Walker Cup team, sailed yesterday for Great Britain in company with the squad of nine on the quest for the famous cup. The team, considered by critics as "about as powerful as any that America has ever sent to the interna- tional wars" looks forward to ten days of practice before the two-day meet begins on historic St. Andrewvs May 11. 1 Tillotson And Patehin Hurl In 7 To 5_Victory Winning Runs Put Across As Waterbor Doubles In Extra Inning EVANSTON, Ill., April 21. - (Spe- cial) -The Wolverine baseball team evened its first Big Ten series with Northwestern today at Roycemorec Field, rallying late to defeat the Wildcats in a thrilling 10-inning game. Fine relief work by Art Patchin on the mound and at the plate pulledy the game out of the fire for the Wol- verines. With men on first and secondt in the seventh and with Michigan trailing four to 1 Patchin was sent in to pinch-hit for Harry Tillotson, who1 had started on the mound. He hit the first ball pitched cleanly into deep; right for three bases, Paulson and Chapman, who had both singled, tal- lying to make the score four to three.j Northwestern scored in the eighth without a hit but the fighting Wol- verines came back with two runs in the ninth with two out to tie the game, five to five. Singles by Avon Artz and Ted Chapman, followed by a crashing double by Stan Waterbor pushed across a two-run lead which Patchin protected in fashion in the rest of the tenth. Lefty Harris started on the mound for the Wildcats and was nicked for three hits in six innings. Pederson, his successor, was hit hard in the ninth and tenth. The Wolverines showed the batting power which characterized their east- ern invasion, garnering a total of 13 hits, although they were guilty of three errors in the field. The Purple nicked the two Wolverine moundsmen for a total of seven hits. Score by innings: Michigan . . .010 000 202 2-7 13 3 Northwestern 020 002 010 0-5 7 2 Batteries: Tillotson, Patchin and Chapman; Harris, Pederson and Clay- born. COLLEGE BALL SCORES Purdue 8, Minnesota 7. Ohio State 6, Indiana 4. Illinois 5, Wisconsin 1. Iowa 5, Iowa State 2. Chicago 14, Notre Dame 12. BASEBALL American League Detroit at Cleveland, no game; cold weather. Philadelphia 7, Washington 2. Boston 9, New York 6. St. Louis at Chicago, no game; cold weather. National League Brooklyn 3, Philadelphia 1. New York 2, Boston 0. Cincinnati 8, Pittsburgh 3. Chicago 2, St. Louis 1. 36 Hole Medal Tourney On Golf Card Next Week A 36-hole medal score tournament to determine the personnel of fresh- man and Varsity golf squads has been announced for Wednesday and Thurs- day by Coach Thomas Trueblood. All scholastically eligible and de- sirous of trying out for either squad must post attested scores in this tour- ney, it was said. Although six men have already played on the Varsity team the com- plete roster yf the ten man squad will be determined by this tourna- ment. Playing privileges will be awarded to all qualifying. The freshman squad, under Alex Jolley, captain of the 1933 links squad, will also compete in a 36-hole meet, those qualifying receiving greens priv- ileges. 18 holes on each day, play be- ginning at 1:30 p.m. PLAY & BYab P LAY -By AL NEWMAN Tenth Commandment .. Tad Wieman... . HAVING ALWAYS BEEN an ardent admirer of intercollegiate sports and contests, it is definitely a change 1 of attitude when I find myself facing about in the spring when those of us who are just marginally fair in some pastime turn again to the great out-of-doors and set ourselves to the unpleasant task of breaking in all over again and getting mighty stiff doing it. But it is just too much to go out on the tennis court and labor and labor to get perhaps ten really good shots in the first afternoon of play and then return to watch the varsity boys easing them over to tick the chalk lines in the corners or chop them dead over the net on a drop- shot. Likewise it is downright discourag- ing to the "just-fair" golfer to go out for an afternoon of well-sliced drives and watch the varsity boys send them screaming high and straight for a good 225 to drop straight to the green or to pitch long and short into bunkers all afternoon and then see an expert with a clockwork stroke lay one fifty yards dead to the pin. No, in the spring I am not in fa- vor of intercollegiate sports because watching the varsity squads causes a great deal of sin. Or does coveting thy neighbor's golf or tennis stroke come under the Tenth Command- ment? I wonder. ACCORDING to Tad Wieman, Princeton line coach and former Michigan head coach, "in the East, the players and community don't look at athletic contests with such a life-and-death attitude. If a game is lost, it is just so much water over the dam." I would like to quarrel with that statement. Princeton has been striv- ing to build up a team for a couple of years now. If such an emphatic at- titude in regard to football had not been built up, probably by the alumni and the financial condition of the Athletic Association, such a fine and valuable line coach as Mr. Wieman would not be there now. And Yale is doing the same thing at present. Perhaps Mr. Wieman's statement would have been a little bit more ac- curate if put in the past tense. But can we forget the report of Prince- ton's marvelous freshman outfit that came through from the East this year? New York sports writers face- tiously called them "Princeton's for- tunate coincidences." Yes, I think that Princeton is pretty well in the foot- ball business right now. Kipke, Little Deride Football 'Bugaboo' Returning from Cleveland where he spoke before a thousand mem- bers of the Physical Education Asso- ciation Thursday, Coach Harry Kipke was on hand for football practice yes- terday. Both Kipke and Lou Little, coach of the Columbia Rose Bowl victors, de- clared that the "bugaboo" of football overemphasis was a thing of the past, that no "menace" is attached to col- lege gate receipts, and that football stimulated an interest of these in the stands for active sports participation. hr 'FBJFANDLY' AND TORTUJNE' SHOES I I SNDENSCHMITT -SAPFEL & COMPANY 209 South Main - Since 1895 .- --"_ I r-*-r _ ... ®r -- --- __ 1 SENIOR CANE S for all schools I Place Your Order Now at BURR PATTERSON AULD & COMPANY Oldest Manufacturing Fraternity Jewelers in America 1 603 Dial 8887 Church Street Frank Oakes, Mgr. 11 II I ti 11 MEN'S ii-:_ _ CLOTHES that combine SMART APPEARANCE UTMOST COMFORT LONG DURABILITY FULL VALUE AT REASONABLE PRICES Also complete new lines of Furnishings I