THE MICHIGAN DAILY ":4 PAGESJXTHEI.H.ANAIL Sherf Signs With Detroit01' mics Captain Seymour Siegel, Bob Ander-' Rotber Downs Kasabach with Stuart Newsom, won the intra- son, and Milton Eskowitz are auto- mural doubles title last fall. matically eliminated. John Rodriguez, Fo I- T ni Crw the Porto Rican netter, is scheduled to! Albert Rotberg defeated Harry Ka- RIVAL RED SOX sail for home June 20, so will be un- sabach, 8-6, 6-4. to win the all-cam- C.C.N.Y. finished last in the East- pus singles tennis title yesterday on ern Intercollegiate water polo league able to contend' the Ferry Field courts. Rotberg, for eight consecutive years. This Spring's Tryout Brings Him Contract Has Been Called Greatest Player To Come Out Of Copper Country By MARJORIE WESTERN Johnny Sherf, Michigan All-Mid- Western hockey star, has signed a contract with Manager Jack Adams of the Detroit hockey teams to play with theOlympics. The Wolverine ace is the only Michigan puck star to be taken directly into the big time ranks from college. Sherf had his tryout with the De- troit teams after the close of the local season early this spring, and Adams was impressed with his performance in the early practices. The result was the contrct, signed last week. Debut In November With his major debut scheduled for the first week of November, Sherf does not expect to be in school next semester. He will finish up and get his degree next June. The Wolverine star is the only puckster ever to have been picked for the honor of captain and left wing of the All-Midwestern hockey team two different years. He was awarded the position both last year and this. He and Johnny Jewell, goalie of the 1935 squad, captained the Wolverine pucksters this past year. Was Team's High Scorer Michigan fans will remember him most vividly as the scoring ace who led the team to their first Confer- ence hockey title in five years. His average for the season fell only one point short of two goals a game. Coach Eddie Lowrey, mentor of the Michigan team, has had a few sea- - sons of worry, for he has admitted that he was afraid the professional moguls would snap up his brilliant wing before he had closed his college career. Practice Begins in October Sherf has been a hockey player since his pre-high school sextet. Qoach Joe Savini of the Michigan Tech team was his first coach, and has since picked him as the greatest player who has ever come out of the Copper Country. Interviewed when he was in Ann Arbor last winter, Sa- vini said that he had no doubt that Sherf would make good if he ever entered professional hockey. The practice season opens for Sherf next October, when he will get about a month of drill before his professional debut. And, says Sherf, 'I have plenty to learn in that time." Flint Central Golf Team Captures Championship Using 348 strokes, three less than its closest rivals, the Flint Cen- tral golf team won the State high school Class A golf title yesterday at the University golf course here. Otta- wa Hills of Grand Rapids, the defend- ing champions, were runners-up. The Class B. title was captured by the Wayne team, while St. Paul's of Owosso were victors in the Class C and D competition. Olympics Sign Him Thorward And Dean Will Enter Intercollegiate Tennis Tourney Although Michigan's tennis sea-I son is officially closed for 1935, the Maize and Blue will be represented on the courts when the National Intercollegiate Tournament opens June 24 in Chicago. At least two of the Wolverine netters will be playing at Northwestern in the singles matches. Ted Thorward and Jarvis Dean have definitely decided to enter the ranks of the contestants. Whether or not they will be the only Michi- gan entrants is still uncertain. There is a possibility that the newly-elected captain, Howie Kahn, and Miller Sherwood will also make a try for the title. Coach Johnstone is reported to have said some time ago that he woud probably not enter any seniors in the play-offs. If that is done, H. W. CLARK English Bootmaker 534-536 Forest , Jockey Boots from $4.95 English Riding Boots from $6.50 L6 f The signing of Johnny Sherf, for three years a Varsity hockey star and last year co-Captain of the team, by the Detroit Olympics was announced yesterday. During his junior and senior years Sherf was chosen as wing on the All-Mid- Western hockey team. Rally In Ninth FutileAs Sox Defeat Detroit The Tigers' customary ninth-in- ning rally failed to succeed and Schoolboy Rowe was defeated by the White Sox, 5 to 4, in the series opener with Chicago. Other results : I I. An Entire Evening's Program of Dance and Entertaining Music as You've Heard Them on the Radio. NOW!! HEAR THEM IN PARISON M C A Presents AND HIS With His Arrayc ISCH KABIBBLE VIRGINIA SIMS SULLY MASON AND KAY KYSER G AMP A X ".. ....... ... .. .. .. .. . - /X/ X- I ............./.. 1-N . ......... .79 x X/J5' V. .::.S. American League Cleveland 3-7, St. Louis 7-2. Washington 0-3, Philadelphia Boston 6-2, New York 0-4. 5 National League Philadelphia 4-3, Brooklyn 8-0. St. Louis 4-4, Chicago 3-1. New York-Boston, rain. Only games scheduled. -7. E ;A o~f All D T 'LEE Rgdio Stars ETHUR WRIGHT BILL STOKER HE FAMOUS CLUB I rn FI i I-M Sports I SENIOR JUNE At the Union BALL 14 Tickets $4.00 17 II The following were the individual winners in all-campus events: Badminton - Carmichael. Bowling, singles - Markham. B o w li n g, doubles - Tramontana and Brown. Codeball - Shaw. Cross-country --Staehle. Foul throwing - Eskowitz. Golf -Mooney. Horse-shoes, doubles - B a 1 d w i n and Smith. Squash - Waterman. Tennis, fall singles - Edmonds. Tennis, fall doubles - Rotberg and Newsom. 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