FIDAY, JUNE 1, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Clarence Markham Is Selected To Lead 1935 Golf Squac .:. New Captain Is Ann Arbor Boy And CityChamp Has Been Letterman For Two Years; Runner-Up For State Title Is Title Contender Letters Are Awarded To 13 Members Of Wolverine Nin <; STAR DUST By AR T CARSTENS Coaeh fisher Markham To Lead In Intereollegiate At Chicago Team Meet / By BILL REED Clarence Markham, a junior from Ann Arbor,.was elected captain of the 1935 golf squad at a meeting of letter- men held yesterday. Those voting in- cluded Captain Eddie Dayton, by proxy, since he has not yet been re- leased from the Health Service, Mark- ham, Woody Malloy, Milton Schloss, Carroll Sweet, Charles Menefee, Law- rence David, and Chuck Kocsis. Markham, who has earned his let- ter for two years, is a product of Ann Arbor High school where he was on the state interscholastic champion- ship team, and is at present city champion of Ann Arbor. He was run- ner-up to Chuck Kocsis in the State amateur tourney last year held at Jackson Country Club. Considered a late-summer golfer, Markham has failed to show the form which carried him to the top in tour- nament play last year, but is consid- ered an outstanding threat in the Na- tional Intercollegiate meet to be held June 25 to June 30 at Cleveland, which Michigan will enter. With five of the eight lettermen for 1934 returning, in addition to Johnny Fischer, the captain-elect who relin- quished his eligibility in order to play on the Walker Cup team this year, Markham will lead one of the strong- est teams ever to represent Michigan oni the links.{ Outstanding Potential Squad A potential squad list for 1935 would include Fischer, former National In- tercollegiate and Big Ten titleholder and record low qualifier in the Na- tional Amateur, Chuck Kocsis, Big Ten and. Michigan State Amateur champion and probably the outstand- ing amateur golfer in the state, Mark- ham, runner-up in the State amateur tourney and Ann Arbor city champion, Woody Malloy, former state high school and Ann Arbor city champion, Big Ten runner-up and one of the state's younger golfers, and several other freshmen and reserve players. Coach Thomas C. Trueblood has an- nounced that a six-man team will rep- resent Michigan in the National In- tercollegiate meet, and that selection of the squad will be delayed until shortly before the tourney, June 25. That the best possible team to repre- sent Michigan will be sent is indi- cated by Coach Trueblood's statement that "the squad will not be limited to lettermen if any eligible undergrad- uate can show superior ability." Michigan, Big Ten champions, will be outstanding favorites to take the title which was won last year for the third straight time by Yale. Squad Has Individual Contenders The Wolverine squad will also in- clude several outstanding candidates for the individual crown held by Wal- ter Emery, of Oklahoma. Heading these will be Chuck Kocsis, who will leave this week for the National Open meet to be held June 7, 8, and 9 at the Merion Cricket Club, Philadelphia. Kocsis was second low qualifier for the Open in.the Detroit district, and will be conceded an excellent show- ing on the same course where he startled the golfing world in 1930 with an upset victory over Francis Ouimet in the National Amateur meet. Malloy, who placed second to Kocsis in the Big Ten tourney as the Wol- verine sophomore ace set a new e- ord, has expressed himself as shoot- ing "the best golf ever" and will also be considered as a championship con- tender. He registered a 70, two below par, on the University course Wednes- day. Markham, too, will be looked upon as a contender if his game begins to click as it has done in past sum- mers. Whether Captain Eddie Dayton, who has not yet left the Health Service, will be able to enter the Na- tional meet is still problematical, but 01 the basis of season's play the Wol- verine leader will be ranked as an outstanding contender. The team championship in the Na- tional meet will be determined by the scores of the four low men on a six- man team in a 36-hole qualifying round, and the individual champion- ship will be determined by matct. play of the 32 low qualifiers. FIELDING AVERAGES C. E. Pet. Chapman .........187 3 .984 Star Dust Consensus. . . . * * * A LREADY the literary muse is slow about spreading his mantle upon my shoulders when I seat myself before a typewriter to indite the column, so today I have asked my colleagues on the sport staff and our various visitors to write it for me. Desiring a certain uniformity in their contribution, I asked them all to aniswer the same question: "Select the individual player, either Michigan or a Michigan opponent, whom you think turned in the out- standing performance in any one game or meet this year. Give your reasons." Of the answers received only two picked the same man: "Frances 'Whitey' Wistert's one-hit, 16-strikeout game against Ohio State at Ferry Field this year. Did not allow 'a hit until two men were down in the ninth. Hit one batter with a pitched ball and walked one."-Fred De- Lano and Robert Cummins, sport reporters. * * * * * 46 TACK MEDICA of Washington University, swimming in the Intercollegiates, won the 1500 meter and the 220 and 400-yard free-style races. In the 440 he establishedt a new mark of 4:46.8; in the 1500 he lowered the old record of 19:20.2 toI 19:12.1; and his time in the 220 was 2:13.2."-Dick Degener, National Div- ing Champion. * * *~ * * "4F RANK LARSON, Minnesota end who played in Michigan's during the Minnesota game and was the chief reason why the passing attack didn't function. He was down on every punt, blocked wonderfully and all in all put up one of the finest exhibitions of football I've ever seen. He wasn't as spectacular as Lund that day but he was more consistent." -Robert J. Friedman, sports reporter. * * * * 44'XWILLIS WARD'S 15 points out of 37112 in winning the Conference indoor track meet, or his 13 out of 18 3-4 at Butler which also won the title for Michigan. Out of 427 points scored by the team both indoor and out, Ward scored 109 of them. Indoors he got 73 out of 238." - C. H.. Beukema - Detroit Free Press.w backfield Michigan S * * * * Also Award's Nine Numerals Wolverine Nine To Finish Up Season Tomorrow t Against Iowa' According to the official releaset from the Board In Control of Ath- letics, Coach Ray Fisher has award- ed 13 letters and 9 numeral awards to his Varsity baseball players. The men receiving letters are: Captain Avon Artz, '34; Ted Chapman, '34; Joe Lerner, '36; Russ Oliver, 135; Art Patchin, '35; Clayt Paulson, '35; Ted Petoskey, '34; Fred Ratterman, '34; John Regeczi, '35; Harry Tillot- son, '34; Stan Waterbor, '34; Ed Wil- son, '35; and "Whitey" Wistert, '34. Varsity numerals will go to the following: George Bolas, '36; Feld- stein, '34; Les Fish, '34; Leland Hall, '36; Milton Meltzer, '35; Harold Roehrig, '35; Art Settle, '37; and Willard Walbridge, '36. Lerner Only Sophomore. Of the players receiving major awards, Artz, Petoskey, Waterbor, and Wistert are three-letter men in baseball, and Regeczi, Paulson, Oliver, Patchin, and Tillotson are receiving their letter for the second time. Joe Lerner is the only sophomore to win a letter. A game with the Iowa University nine at Ferry Field tomorrow will close the season for the Wolverines; a somewhat unsuccessful season in the light of performances by former Michigan nines under the tutelage of Coach Fisher. Michigan must de- feat Iowa to reach the .500 mark in the . Conference standings. The nine's present league record is five wins against six losses, with an en- tire season record of 12 victories and 11 defeats. This year's Wolverine nine has been one of the hardest hitting teams Coach Fisher has ever coached here. Five men are now hitting over .300. Petoskey leads the team with an av- erage of .363. Artz follows with .333, Paulson .322, Regeczi .314, and Oliver .304. At mid-season mark, Wistert was hitting well over .400, Artz had an average of .463, Petoskey and Paulson were hitting over .390. De- spite this hitting power which netted the Wolverines an average of seven runs and 10 hits , per game, they dropped half their games. Poor fielding turned Michigan from a championship threat into just an- other ball team, and accounted di- rectly for most of the losses, although the pitching of Wistert and Patchin was shaky on several occasions. From a total of 697 fielding chances, the boys fumbled 60, for a team fielding percentage of .916. Besides leading the team in hitting, Petoskey has smashed out the most extra base blows. He is the leading home run hitter with five circuit drives, is tied for the team lead in doubles with four, and has three triples for a total of 25 extra bases. Wistert to Pitch. Wistert is second incextra base hits, with a total of 16, closely follow- ed by John Regeczi, the most improv- ed hitter on the ball club, with 15. Wistert, despite his huge stature which affords opposing hurlers ample room to pitch to, has received the greatest number of bases on balls- 24. Wistert will climax his brilliant athletic careertwhen he faces the IHawkeyes on 'the mound tomorrow, and if Michigan's powerful hitting team fields with even mediocre abil- ity, if Wistert hurls the brand of ball he's capable of, the Wolves will have to wait at least another year before a Michigan nine finishes be- low the .500 mark. ''WARD'S PERFORMANCE in the Ohio State football game was, in my estimation, the outstanding performance of the year. But for his interception of a long Ohio pass the Buckeyes might have scored. As it was, Ward plucked the pass out of the air and ran 50 yards before being brought down by a diving tackle. This changed the whole aspect of the game and made a Michigan victory certain." - Marjorie Western, sports assistant. * *, * * * "4NORMAN COTTOM of Purdue put on the best exhibition of basketball seen on the Yost Field House floor last season. Scoring twelve points and committing only one personal foul, he was easily the outstanding player on the Boilermaker team that walloped Michigan 51-20. His footwork, ball- handling, deadly marksmanship, and natural speed were combined into an exhibition of basketball that was a rev- .; elation to Michigan fans."-George J. Andros, sports re- porter.* ".; "TED PETOSKEY'S all-around brilliant performance in the second baseball game of the Eastern trip against Colgate, receives my nomination. 'Pete' drove out two triples and two singles for five times at the plate. He drove in three runs and scored one himself to enable the Wolverines to defeat Colgate, 9 to 6, for their first win. He also handled four fly balls perfectly, making two fine _ running catches." - Art Settle, sports assistant. * * * * * ** HUCK KOCSIS. In the field of, individual endeavor, Kocsis' sizzling round of 66 in the first day's play of the Big Ten golf tourney is out- standing. Playing under adverse conditions including a high wind which sent most scores soaring, Kocsis breezed around the Kildeer course five under par to set a new course record." - Bill Reed, sports assistant. Fischer and Luke Hamlin yesterday. to defeat Detroit, 11 to 3, and gain an even break in the four-game series. Manager Frankie Frisch's double in the tenth gave the other St. Louist team, the Cardinals, a 3-2 victory! over the Cincinna- ti Reds and ar sweep of the series. St. Louis is but one and a half gamesl ahead of the Cubs and Giants, who " are tied for second, while only seven games separate the; first-place Cleve- land Indians and last-place White Sox in the Ameri- cn League. j aN FRSa. Clift, Browns third baseman and one of the sev- eral fast-moving rookies who are making St. Louis a very disturbing element in the American League race, clouted a home run into left field stands with the bases loaded in the fifth to end Detroit's chances. Monte Weaver kept the Yankee's hits well-scattered as the Senators drove out 14 hits to win, 9-3. Zeke Bonura, slugging White Sox rookie, hit his twelfth homer of the season and led his team to a 12-5 win over Cleveland. Chuck Klein's fourteenth homer of the season, Babe Herman's two dou- bles and a pair of singles, and Hart- nett's double with the bases full gave the Chicago Cubs more than enough runs to defeat the hapless Pirates, 11 to 5. The victory BABE HE.RMAI I lifted the Cubs into a tie for second place, while the Pirates fell back into Davis Cup Squad Wins Zone Crown BALTIMORE, June 1. - W) ---The United States National doubles ten- nis champions, George Lott and Les- ter Stoef en, defeated the Mexican doubles team of Dr. Ricardo Tapia and Eduardo Mestre, Jr., today to win the North American Zone Davis Cup round and give the United States the right to meet the European Zone champions. The score was 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. Today's doubles victory followed two straight-set singles triumphs yesterday, Sidney B. Wood beating Esteban M. Reyes and Stoefen down- ing Tapia. Two more singles matches are totbe played Saturday, but even if the United States loses both, it cannot affect the result. A last minute shift was made in the Mexican line-up today, with the team captain, Dr. Tapia, replacing Angel Roldan. Roldan was said to be feel- ing ill. 15 INTRAMURAL SPORTS The annual intramural athletic program at the University of Florida is composed of 15 different sports. CORBETT'S Friday and Saturday Specials MICHAELS STERN SUIT $18.50 $23.50 $25 & $30 val. $35 & $40 val. Alterations at Cost SANFORIZED SLACKS 1000 pair to choose from. $1.95 $2.45 BEDFORD CORDS in White or Stripes FLANNEL SLACKS White, Grey, Tan $4.50 to 6.95 JANTZEN SWIMMING SUITS Gantner's HI-BOYS and WIKIES Hawaiian SWIM TRUNKS by Manhattan $2.50 National League American League Cleveland ..... New York. Detroit .......... Washington.... St. Louis ....... . Boston .......... Philadelphia . Chicago........ W 21 .22 ,., ....21 21 .. 18, . .....17 .. 16 . . 15 St. Louis. New York. Chicago......... Pittsburgh ...... Boston ........ . Brooklyn .....,. Philadelphia ... . Cincinnati ...... W L 25 13 .25 16 .......25 16 ......20 16 .......20 16 .......16 22, ..,... .11 24 . 8 27 Cavalcade 1"O Star In . Aterican Derbyi CHICAGO, May 31. - (/P) ---Caval- -ade will carry top weight of 126 pounds when he defends his claim to the three-year-old championship against a field of fast stepping rivals in the $25,000 added American Derby Saturday at Washington Park. His weight, the same he carried to victory in the Kentucky Derby, will be five pounds over that assigned to his Brookmeade Stable mate, Time Clock; Mrs. J. H. Whitney's Singing Wood, and Plight, Texas Derby winner. Alfred G. Vanderbilt's Discovery, second to Cavalcade in the Kentucky Derby, was given a weight impost of 118 pounds, a margin that should make the mile and a quarter race an exciting duel. Mata Hari, the great filly that couldn't last at Churchill Downs, will tote low weight of 116 pounds. With the big race only 48 hours away, a field of 12 seemed certain. The other entries regarded as sure starters were Spy Hill, Patchpocket, Bien Fait, Sir Ten, Prince Pompey and Mr. Bun, all assigned 118 pounds. Ilawkeye Nine IDefeats Minnesota' By 4-3 Score The University of Iowa nine, en route to Ann Arbor-where the Hawk- eyes will engage the Michigan nine tomorrow, defeated the Minnesota team, last year's Conference champs, 4-3, and shoved the Gophers farther into the depths of the Big Ten cel- lar. Other college results: Michigan Normal 7, Toledo Uni- versity 4. Western State 4, Wisconsin 1. A FATHER'S DAY SUGGESTION L 14 16 18 19 19 21 22 22 St. Louis Has Banner Day As Cardinals And Browns Triumph St. Louis' surprising Browns blasted a tie with Boston for fourth. The out three home runs, six doubles, and New York Giants lost to Brooklyn, five singles off the pitching of Carl 6-2. DODGERS BUY HOGGE NEW YORK, May,31.--()--Th BrooklynDodgersannounced toda the purchase of Sonny Hogge, twenty one-year-old infielder of the Dayto: Ohio, team. He will report here t morrow. Sanforised $1.75 $2.4 $2.95 PCT. .600 .579 .538 .525 .486 .447 .421 .405 PCT. .632 .610 .610 .556 .556 .421 .314 .229 Clothes for Dress and Sports Wear $ .50 $ .5 $1650 22.11 Slack!. t SHOP FOR MEN 119 South Main St. -'-F Large Stocks to Choose From, ALL SIZES 0 Sport Shoes WOMEN'S SPORTS "Progress has been made in women's sports this year," declared Dr. Margaret Bell, director of Phy- sical Education for women. "The Board in Control by financing a backboard for tennis and putting greens will make even greater im- provement possible." she continued. A double backboard as high as the wire fence is to be installed in the east-west direction on the cement courts. Backboards are recommend- ed by professional players as an ex- cellent means of developing one's stroke. Thus the student will be able to practice without an opponent. The golf putting greens are to be constructed between the Women's Athletic Building and the tennis courts. The ground will be elevated and resodded with German bent. Moreover, in the future, the eight most promising women golfers will be privileged to compete on the courses around Ann Arbor without. paying fees. ARE SPEED DEMONS. The lammergeirs and swallows are the speed demons of the feathered world. EXTRA BASES Lutz, Snyder Meet In Golf Title Match Dick Lutz, '35, will meet DeWitt Snyder, '36, in the finals of the all- campus golf tournament either tomor- row or Sunday, after defeating Bud Schaible, '35A yesterday at the Uni- versity course, two up and one to play. Lutz's medal score for the com- plete 18 holes was 77. Snyder had defeated Bob Muzzey, '34, earlier in the week in the other semi-final bracket. 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