SVNBAY, MAY 5,1935 'I'CI MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDY, MY 5,193 THE MICHGAN AIL Maize And Blue Golfers Overwhelm Ohio State, Woody Malloy Is Low Scorer ForMichigan Chuck Kocsis Collects Six Points For Wolverines In Double Win By FRED BUESSER A fighting Ohio State golf team came back yesterday afternoon after it had been shut out in the morning, 9-0, to throw a bad scare into the Wolverines before finally bowing to the National Champions, 19/2-4%/2 in the second Big Ten match of the sea- son for both teams. Playing without the services of Johnny Fischer, Walker Cup mem- ber who is suffering from a mild back injury, Michigan was still good enough to hand the Buckeyes a one- sided defeat, although the outcome was not at all assured when the singles ,matches in the afternoon made the turn. Woody Malloy had low medal of the day when he put together rounds of 37 and 36 for a 73 to defeat Bob Coe, and take the match, 3-0. To Chuck Kocsis, however, go the real honors of the day. Not only did the reliable State Amateur Champion have low medal in the morning when he teamed with Larry David to de- beat Bill St. John and Bill Loveberry, 3-0, but he came back in the after- noon to play Loveberry in the No. 1 individual match, and in spite of the obvious trouble that he was having with his tee-shots and the loss of his putting touch, battled it out with Loveberry in a brilliant ding-dong battle that was not decided until the eighteenth green. Start Poorly Both Loveberry and Kocsis started poorly, Chuck winner of the first hole with a six. Loveberry took the sec- ond when Kocsis found trouble with his woods, and they halved the third in .five. They came up to the' sixth green all even, but Kocsis' approach was a beauty that stopped less than a foot from the pin. Loveberry was in the trap with his second and had a pretty out that was almost in the cup. The hole put Kocsis one-up. Chuck's drive on seven was a bad slice but he made a nice recovery from the rough and won the hole with a four when Loveberry was short with his second and took two puts. Love- berry found trouble on nine when he hooked his drive, and at the turn locsis was two-up. His medal score was 38 to Loveberry's 40. Kocsis won the tenth with a par, and they halved the 12th and 13th. Chuck was having a terrible time with his short puts, but he hung on grimly as he missed from four and five feet. Loveberry birdied the 13th to even the nine and took the 14th with a par three- to go one-up when Kocsis' tee shot caught a trap. Sinks Ten-Footer Chuck came back to win the 15th when he dropped a ten-footer for a par, and on the .16th hit a beautiful screaming drive that split the fair- way for a good two hundred and twenty yards. He was on in two and down in four, but Loveberry got a halve when he sunk a forty-foot put. Bill's drive on 17 was down the em- bankment and he took four to reach the green, Chuck taking the hole with a par four to go one-up. On the eighteenth Loveberry had a strong second that carried to the back of the green while Kocsis' second caught the trap on the left. Kocsis was nice- ly out in three and down in five, but Loveberry missed his chance when he three-putted for a five, a halve, and a medal score of 39 for the nine. Kocsis had a 38 which together with his 38 on the first nine, gave him a medal score of 76, the same medal card he had on his morning round. He took all three points. Carrol Sweet defeated Ken Landis, 2%-1/, as Sweet put together nines of 39 and 38 for a 77 as opposed to Landis' 42 and 38 for an even 80. Sweet missed a shut-out on the eighteenth green when he failed to sink a two-foot put. Larry David split the points with Brindle of O.S.U. when both carded 78's. Brindle took the first nine, two-up, and David the second by the same margin. Dana Sepley, after defeating Brin- dle in the morning individual match, 3-0, with a 76, faltered a little in the afternoon to drop his match with Bill St. John, 1/-22. Both had medal cards of 81. In the other foursome match of the morning, Woody Malloy teamed with Al Saunders to beat Bob Coe and Ken Landis, 3-0. Malloy had a 77 and Saunders a 78. ?-__._- - Sidelight Illinois' is Of Victory' Red Sox Lose J OverMichigan By ARTHUR S. SETTLE Failure of Michigan'sclean-up hit- ters to come through cost the Wolv- erines a most important ball game yesterday. On four occasions, in each instance with one or two men on base, Clayt Paulson, Capt. Russ Oliver and John Regeezi alternately were unable to get the ball out of the infield. Nine men were stranded on the bases any two of whom could have won the balll game. Scarcity of hitting by both teams is testimony of the brand of ball hurled by Hale (Swede) Swanson and Berger (Swede) Larson. Both; pitchers are standouts in the Big Ten. To rate Swanson ahead of Larson be- cause Illinois won, getting two more hits than Michigan, is to disregard the fact that Larson was pitching against a better hitting team. Both men exhibited exceptional control, walking only five men which is all the more remarkable when it is con- sidered that they were playing the corners all afternoon, throwing very few balls through the heart of the plate. Michigan's ace hurler worked him- self out of holes in each of the first seven innings, the Illini having run- ners on the sacks in each of these frames. In the fifth, with Reinhart on first and one out, Henry hit a grounder to Teitelbaum which the Wolverine shortstop fielded hurried- ly, threw to Paulson at second, forc- ing Reinhart, and Paulson pivoted nicely to get off a quick throw to Oliver nipping Henry, reputed to be a 10-second man, at first for a snappy double play. The most dramatic, nerve-tingling stage of the game occurred in the Illini half of the sixth. With one run home, the bases loaded and two out, Larson threw three straight balls to Swanson. His superb control was further manifested when he cut the corner with the two following pitches, making the count three-and-two. On the next pitch, Swanson lined weakly to short. Swanson, the shrewd Orange and Blue twirler, found Regeczi's blind alley in the first inning and from then on Michigan's most potent slugger was helpless at the plate. However, in atonement, John made the best fielding play of the game when he ran approximately forty yards to take Moyer's long fly over his shoulder in the eighth. Opening Game To Tigers ,5-2 Sullivan Limits Boston To Eight Hits In Defeating Wesley Ferrell DETROIT, May 4- The Detroit Tigers defeated the Boston Red Sox, 5-2, here today, behind the eight-hit pitching of rookie Joe Sullivan. Sullivan, who is fast becoming the Tiger's best pitcher, weakened mo- mentarily in the fifth inning; but with the bases full, one out, and one run already in, he settled down to get the next two batters on easy outs. The Tiger's bats, quiet in their first few games, continued to boom as they smashed out 11 hits and chased Wesley Ferrell from the box. OTHER RESULTS American League Chicago 5, Washington 4. Philadelphia 12, Cleveland 1. New York-St. Louis, cold. National League Pittsburgh 1, Brooklyn 0. St. Louis 3, Boston 0. Cincinnati-New York, cold, rain. Chicago-Philadelphia, wet grounds. BIG TEN BASEBALL Chicago 6, Indiana 1. Minnesota 3, Northwestern 1. Wisconsin 3, Iowa 1. Ohio State 10, Notre Dame 9. Michigan Drew Biggest Gate For Minnesota MINNEAPOLIS, May 4. - (P) - Minnesota's 1934 Big Ten champion- ship football team left a good record on the University's bank book as well as gridirons of the nation, Comp- troller W. T. Middlebrook reported today. The homecoming game here with Michigan drew' the largest net re- ceipts, $50,344.32, topping any game in the two-year period. For the Min- nesota-Pittsburgh game, played at Pittsburgh, net receipts were $41,- 855.55. H. W. CLARK English Bootmaker 534-536 Forest Jockey Boots from $4.95 English Riding Boots from $6.50 Renner, Ghesquiere And Cooper Star For Blues In 34-6 Win Over Yellows By GEORGE J. ANDROS Displaying a better-balanced and more consistent offense than their opponents, the Blues ran over the Yellows for a 34-6 victory in the an- nual spring football class held yester- day afternoon in the Stadium. Yesterday's game marked the con- clusion of the spring training season for Coach Harry Kipke's Wolverine gridders. The Yellows, with freshman Stark Ritchie setting the pace, started the game off with a bang and piled up a six-point lead before the first ex- change of punts. Ritchie ran 17 yards to the Blues' 38-yard line, Chuck Brandman added nine, and Doug Farmer plunged through for a first down on the 27. Ritchie, starting off right tackle, cut back and out ran the Blue secondary to score in the far corner of the field. Bob Campbell failed to convert, and the score remained 6-0 in favor of the Yellows. Soon after Brandman fumbled Ced- ric Sweet's punt on his own 40, and George Ghesquiere and Harry Wright recovered for the Blues. After Bob Cooper had made three through the line, Captain Bill Renner passed to Ghesquiere who tossed a lateral to Cooper who outsmarted the Yellow secondary to complete a 37-yard gain and tie the score. George Marzonie put the Blues ahead 7-6 with a per- fect placekick Renner's pass to John Smithers after a Blue advance and Marzonie's second successful kick put the Blues ahead 13 to 6 just after the second quarter had started. The Blues lost another chance to score later in the quarter from the eleven-yard line when the Yellow-- shirted team recovered Chris Ever- hardus' lateral. There was no further scoring until early in the fourth quar- ter when the Blues began a drive that netted them three touchdowns. Renner threwa long pass from his own 39 that was good for a 46-yard gain on the Yellow's ten. Chet Sta- for another bowitz made the second of two fine converted to catches on this play, and topped it the Blues,, off with a nice run. Frank Dutkowski gathering fo gained one yard through the line, and Ritchie we Renner then faded back and sent a ing back on bullet pass into the arms of Ghes- only did he quiere across the goal line. Dutkow- driving man ski converted and the scdre was 20-6. ly accuracy, The whole Blue line, lead by ends and his punr Stabowitz and Ghesquiere, broke lines or wen through a short time later and occasion. blocked Bill Barclay's punt, Stabo- witz recovering on the Yellow's 16. Cooper gained half a yard on a wide end run, and then Renner made an- other fine pass to Ghesquiere, who dodged to the Yellow's three-yard line. After Cooper had lost seven owing in part to a low pass from! center, Joe Ellis cut off tackle and out-maneuvered the secondary to score on one of the best runs of the Do day. Dutkowski again planted the ball between the crossbars and the da) Blues were ahead 27 to 6. Everhardus accounted for the next seven points almost single-handedly. Intercepting a pass on the Yellow's 35, he ran 26 yards before being tackled on the 9. He gained three, and after Chuck Grey 6ad been stopped at the line, added another. The sophomore halfback then threw a pass to Smithers into the far corner of the field that was good L There's Nothing So Embarrassing . 11 FRITERNITY JEWE LRY i Ii i | Track Summaries I L r I Burr, Pa Mile run: Won by Brelsford (M.); second, Smith (M.); third, Pinker- ton (M.). Time, 4:25.3. 440-yard run: Won by Patton (M.); second, Birleson (M.); third, Fisher (M.). Time, :49.5. 110-yard dash: Won by Stoller (M.); second, Lander (Minn.); third, Stiles (M.). Time, :10. ,120-yard higlrhurdles: Won by Os- good (M.); second, Hunt (M.); third, Wishnick (Minn.). Time, :15.3. High jump: Moore (M.); Moisio (M.); and Hunn (M.) tied for first. Heighth, 5 feet 6 inches. 880-yard run: Won by Gorman (M.); second, Davidson (M.); third, Aikens. Time, 1:55.7. Shot put: Won by Krezowski (Minn.); second, Friemuth (Minn.); third, Etchells. Distance, 44 feet, 7% inches. 220-yard dash: Won by Stoller (M.); second, Stiles (M.); third, Lan- der (Minn.). Time, :22.8. Two-mile run: Won by Slocum (Minn.) ; second, Walter Stone (M.); 'third, Howell (M.). Time, 9:36.3. Javelin throw: Won by Adam Stone (M.); second, Kositchek (M.); third, Burg (Minn.). Distance, 177 feet, 7 inches. 220-yard low hurdles: Won by Os- good (M.); second, Hunt (M.); Krause (Minn.). Time, :24.5. Pole vault: Hunn (M.) and Drou- lard (M.) tied for first; third, Koche- var (Minn.). Heighth, 11 feet, 6 inches. Discus throw: Won by Etchells (M.); second, Savage (M.); third, Silverman (M.). Distance, 138 feet, 3% inches. Broad jump: Won by Stoller (M.); second, Hunt (M.); third, Hunn (M.). Distance, 20 feet, 11 inches. r- "-\ SUDDEN SERVICE l GOF Tee-Off With Good Equipment. We invite you to stop in and look over our new 1935 stock of GOLF EQUIPMENT. No obligations-we're glad to have you. NATIONALLY KNOWN CLUBS by Hagen, McGregor, Kroydon, Spalding TENNIS RACKETS By Spalding, Wright & Ditson, Magnan, Bancroft fli\ L iO - ATIE JTREET j EW E L E R WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIRING HENEVER you are wearing white clothes there is nothing so embarass- ing as that feeling whether they have been cleaned correctly. You wonder if there may be a trace of yellow or little spots on your white 'linens or palm beaches. 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