THE MICHIGAN DAILY II Golfers Defeat Spartans; Michigan Beats Illinois Netmen v Koc sis Cards 73 To Annex Medal Honors Team Wins Seven Singles Matches Out Of Eight; Win Easily,_19-5 By GEORGE ANDROS Displaying typical early-season form without registering a single par score, Michigan's National Collegiate championship golf squad eased to a 19-5 victory over Michigan State yes- terday afternoon at the 'University Golf Course in the opening meet of the season. Capt. Chuck Kocsis took medal honors and came closest to perfect figures for the 18 holes with a one- over-par 73, followed closely by Alan Saunders, junior veteran playing at number three, who carded 74. The Wolverines took seven out of eight singles matches in medal play, while no doubles were played. Has Off Day Woody Malloy, consistent number two man and co-medalist with Koc- sis in the National Collegiate meet last June, played with foreign clubs while his own were delayed in re- pair and had an off day with an 80. Malloy lost his match to Brand of the Spartans, 2% to 12. His 41 on the first nine was good enough for a halve, but Brand came back over the home nine to sew up the match as Malloy was shooting a 39. Larry David, sIided iy an eagle three on the par five 18th hole, fol- lowed Captain Kocsis and Saunders in scoring with a 77. David, Saund- ers and Captain Kocsis were the only players on Coach Ray Courtright's squad to take clean-cut 3-0 victories over their opponents. Kocsis Putting Well Captain Kocsis was not reaching the green on most holes in his usual perfect fashion but his fine putting earned him a 36 and a 37 in his total of 73. This score and the 74 of Saunders were remarkable after the bare week of practice the Varsity has been able to put in at the University course. After Malloy's 80 on the Michigan scores came Bill Barclay with an 83, followed by Harrison Williams with an 85, Russ Strickland with an 86, and Al Karpinski with an 87. Coach Courtright and five Wolver- ines are leaving this morning to en- gage Purdue in the first dual meet of the season at Lafayette tomorrow. The men making the trip are Captain Kocsis, Malloy, Saunders, Karpinski and Barclay. David, who probably would have made the trip, is going south on business. SUMMARIES Captain Kocsis (), 73 def. Taylo (S), 81, 3 to0. Brand (S), 77, def. Malloy (M), 80 2% to . Saunders (M), 74, def. Henrickson (S), 84, 3 to 0. David (M), 77, def. Nosall (S), 86 3 to 0. Karpinski (M), 87, def. Richard- son (S), 89, 2 to 1. Barclay (M), 83, def. Zimmermar (S), 83, 21/2 to 1/2. Strickland (M), 86, def. Silcox (S) 80, 21/2 to 1/2. Williams (M), 85 def. Reasoner (S) 94, 2% to %. To Lead Swimmers Wisconsin Coach Kahn's Defeat Wins Local Opener Doubles In 'Pro' Only Loss In Ball And Medicine Individual Play By IRVING LISIGOR Bobby Poser, Wisconsin's baseball Varsity Takes Four Out Of coach, is making one profession pay Five In Singes And Splits for another, although playing big league baseball has very little in !In Doubles common with the inore delicate pur- sui ofadmniserig t th sik. he CHAMPAIGN. Ill.. April 25.- (11Th - suit of administering to the sick. The Coach John Johnstone's touring young Badger coach, however, finds Michigan netmen swept four of the time for both. five singles matches and gained an Poser is enrolled in the Wisconsin even break in the doubles to defeat medical school, taking a curtailed the University of Illinois tennis team course so that he can coach base- y today, 5 to 2. ball. Then, as soon as classes ad- Captain Howie Kahn lost a very journ, he reports to Rogers Hornsby close match to Moll of Illinois in as a member of the St. Louis Browns' three sets, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4 in the num- hurling staff. This will be his second ber one singles. Miller Sherwood, season with the Browns. Last year moved up to the number two position he won one and lost one, although because of his consistently good play- he worked several times in a relief ing in the first two matches, defeated role. Maloney, 6-1, 6-3, with comparative Poser, who was also a basketball ease. star while eligible at Wisconsin, first Johnny Rodriguez came back after attracted attention as a hard-hitting dropping the first set to Rich, 4-6, outfielder. The Chicago White Sox and won the match with two decisive signed him up in 1933, then shipped 6-2 sets, playing a fine brand of ten- him to Des Moines in the Western nis after a poor start. League, where he led the circuit in Jarvis Dean and Ted Thorward, hitting. playing in the number four and num- Helping the versatile coach on his ber five positions respectively for the present road trip is Johnny Tomek, Varsity netters, both won hard-fought the Badger's star hurler last year. three-set battles. Thorward made a Tomek, enro led in the Law School, is fine comeback after dropping the first following his mentor's footsteps. Dur- set 6-1; and after getting through ing the summer, he also pitches pro- a deuced second set made quick work fessional ball. Minneapolis of the of his opponent, Hicks, in the third American Association gave him a and final set. brief trial last season, then released SUMMARIES him to Des Moines, where he expects Singles: to work this coming summer. Moll (I) d. Kahn (M) 6-3, 3-6, 6-4. Wolverines Rise To Greatest Track Heights At Penn Relays By FRED BUESSER Iother Michigan men have been able Michigan has every right to be to accomplish in the history of the proud of her band of track men who Penn meet. Running against the it It 1 I I( 1 1 l 3 ; ' i i. r i t' i , 6 F I. , won the acenm of the sporting world yesterday and Friday as they carriedI the Maize and Blue colors to victory over the nation's outstanding starsI in three events of the Penn Relays,I but Coach Charlie Hoyt must be the most gratified of all. He picked the 15 men for the squad whom he believed had a good chance to place in the Great Penn Carnival, and after the last spike had crunched across the finish line late yesterday afternoon, the final tally showed that every Michigan man had paid his own railway fare. Not a Wolverine made the trip in vain, each man or team had placed in this, the super-outdoor meet of the season. The Wolverines performed as of twenty-five years ago when Michigan dominated the college track field, but yesterday Stain Birleson, Harvey Pat- ton, Bob Osgood and Captain Frank Aikens succeeded in doing what no Captain Berger Larson chalked up his second Conference victory yesterday against Wisconsin, strik- ing out eleven batters. super one-mile teams of East, West and South, this Wolverine quartet stepped off the measured mile in 3:18.4 to add the one-mile college relay crown to its long list of titles. Even the expert experters shook their heads when Hoyt named Walt Stone to run in the steeplechase and Leonard Dworsky as a javelin entry, but Hoyt's wisdom was bore than borne out. Dworsky, who has never competed in a Varsity meet, grabbed third place, and Stone, who had never run in a steeplechase before in his life, ran the race of his life to defeat a picked field of specialists in this event. SENIOR CAPS and GOWNS Place Your Order Without De- lay. No Deposit Is Required When the Order Is Given. We furnish all new outfits of the better quality and made ac- o o r d i n g to Intercollegiate Standards. ORDER NOW! GEO. J. MOE Sports Shops Frank Barnard, '37, of Detroit, Big Ten champion in the 440-yard free-style, was elected co-captain of the 1936-37 Michigan swimming team at the annual team banquet Friday night. The other half of the new Varsity captaincy is Jack Kaslcy, '37E, of Ann Arbor. Distance Men Show Speed, In Drake Relays Cunnngham And Lash Set Pace As U. S. Olympic Hopes Soar DES MOINES, Iowa, April 25. - (;P) - Glenn Cunningham, that grand old man of the American footracing wars, and Don Lash, welterweight Indiana University speedster, who may some day take Cunningham's place as ruler of the middle distances, gave America's Olympic hopes a shot in the arm today by racing to new American records in the 27th an- nual Drake Relay games. The great Kansan whose failure to win mile races every time he start- ed in the "indoor season" caused concern over his Olympic prospects, gave a highly reassuring demonstra- tion in outfooting a picked field in the featured 1,000 yard run. Glenn not only won, but showed a sample of newly acquired finishing "kick" to finish in 2 minutes, 11.2 seconds. The time was more than a second slower than his own indoor mark of 2:10.1, but it did trim a full second off the former outdoor stand- ard achieved by Pennsylvania's Lar- ry Brown in 1921. Lash's contribution to the smashing of seven records in the midwest's blue ribbon Relay Carnival, was fully as convincing as Cunningiiam's fine job. Not very big, but with speed to burn today, the Hoosier ace made a show of his field in winning the two-mile in 9 minutes, 10.6 seconds, running alone after the first 100 yards, Lash increased his lead so rapidly that he sprinted through the tape 250 yards ahead of Wayne Slocum of Minne- sota. Track Summaries One-mile college relay champion- ship - Won by Michigan (F. Aikens, H. Patton, R. Osgood, S. Birleson); second, Manhattan; third Syracuse. Time-3:18.4. Two-mile college relay champion-, :hip-Won by Ohio State (Sexton, Bickle, O'Brien, Beetham); second, Manhattan; third, Michigan; fourth, Penn; fifth, Columbia. Time-7:49.8. Four-mile college relay champion- ship-Won by Michigan (Stone, Fink, c+-IA"~ drlfiA anr C nnll- Sherwood (M) d. Maloney (I) 6-1, 6-3. Rodriguez (M) d. Rich (I) 4-6, 6-2, 6-2. Dean (M) d. Lewers (I) 8-6,13-6, 6-4. Thorward (M) d. Hicks () 1-6, 7-5, 6-3. Doubles: Lewers and Rich (I) d. Rodriguez and Dean (M) 6-4, 0-6, 6-4. Sherwood and Kahn (M) d. and Turner (I) 6-4, 7-5. Moll Michigan Wins Over Wisconsin In Nith Innint (Continued from Page 1) Ferner hit safely but lacked the punch to score at the time. Wisconsin tied the count in the first of the third when O'Brien, the pitcher, walked and then was shoved around the bases on a long three base smash into center field by Rondone. Larson fanned two men in this in- ning as he also did in the first, fourth and fifth sessions. The Wolverines had a rally started in the fourth when Lerner and Krem- er registered base knocks, but it was cut short when Heyliger lifted to Capicek in center for the third out. In the fifth, however, Michigan did push across a run. George Rudness, playing despite a sore ankle, doubled down the left field line with one away and was sacrificed to third by Don Brewer. He scored when Schroder, Badger third baseman, threw wildly to first in an attempt to get Ferner for the third out. The second Badger run came after Heyer singled in the eighth and went to second on Jablonski's throw into center field trying to catch him steal- ing second. Klink was out, Jablonski to Lerner, and Heyer went to third. It was at this time that Lerner made his bad throw across the infield, giv- ing Wisconsin a run. Michigan went out in order in the eighth as did the Badgers in their half of the ninth. Lerner drew a walk to open the last of the ninth and then cut loose with a burst of speed. on the bases that netted him second and tlird while Kremer was striking out Heyliger was purposely passed. Larson drove the first ball thrown him toward the second baseman and Lerner scored easily, Heyer not hav- ing a chance to catch him with a throw home. Larson was thrown out at first for the second out, but the ball game was won. Box SCore i 1 I staeiLe, Btresroral ); seconc , ornen; I Box score: third, Michigan State; fourth, Man- Wisconsin (2) AB hattan; fifth, Army. Time-18:02.3. Wegner, lb4......4 Broad Jump-Won by Jesse Owens Rondone, c.......3 Ohio State, distance, 23 feet 5/8 inch; Reinhart, c.......1 second, Samuel Stoller, Michigan, 22 Heyer, 2b........4 feet, 73 inches; third, P. M. Way, Klink, rf.........4 Princeton, 22 feet 7% inches; fourth, Gerlach, ss.......4 F. W. Dittrich, Michigan State, 22 Capicek, cf.......4 feet 64 inches: fifth, Robert Schuen- F i .........4 eman, Penn, 22 feet, 33/4 inches. Schroder, 3b......4 100-meter final-Won by Owens; O'Brien, p. .... 1 second, Stoller; third, Tolmich;, . fourth, Wallender; fifth, Mingee; To sixth, Reeves. Time-10.5. (New Penn otals 33 Relays record. Old record 10.6, by i. Two out when win] Peacock, Temple, 1935). in inth. Jevelin Throw -Won by Eugene Michigan (3) AB Taano, Pittsburgh, distance 196 feet, Rudness, cf.......4 4 inches; second, W. Clark, Rich- Brewer, ss ........3 mond, 187 feet 5/8 inches; third, L. Ferner, 3b ........4 Dworsky, Michigan, 183 feet, 5 inches; Uricek, 2b ........4 fourth, D. T. Haupt, Cornell, 180 feet Jablonski, c .......3 8 1/8 inches; fifth, S. E. Buckland, Lerner, lb4.......2 Army, 180 feet, % inch; sixth, Robert eer If3.......4 Pettigrew, Ohio State, 179 feet, 3 Heyliger, rf.4....3 inches. ........ R 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 H 0 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 P 8 6 2 0 1 2 1 1 5 0 A 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 2 1 E 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 6 ~26 13 3 ning run scored R 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 H 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 P 1 0 3 0 12 9 1 0 1 A 0 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 3 E 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 !-a UNIVERSITY TENNIS Service a, 0 I-M Softball Honor Roll. (EDITOR'S NOTE : An Intramural softball honor roll, includingnthe out- standing players of every game played, will be selected by the officials of each game every week. This is the first list released by the I-M department). Andros, Chi Phi. Andros, Chi Psi. Henoch, D.T.D. Thompson, T.K.E. Gerkensmyer, Theta Xi. Valpey, Acacia. Lusk, Sigma Phi. Aron, Z.B.T. Webb, A.KIL. Slavin, Phi Sig. Wolf, Delta Sig. Chapman, Zeta Psi. Palmer, Chi Psi. Stolberg, A.O. Emerson, PsiAU. Kaufman, S.A.M. E. Townsend, DK.E. Blumenfeld, Phi B.D. Weisert, Phi Delt. Adams, Trigon. Hinckley, Sigma Chi. Bolas, D. U. Rieck, Phi K.T. Fisher, Pi Lam. Blaine, K.D.R. Slootmaker, A.T.O. McCarthy, Theta De t Cole, Alpha Delt. Stein, Kappa Sig. Huber, S.P.E. Walbridge, Alpha Sig. Van Belves, Phi A.K. Stewart, Law Club. Kilman, Phi S.K. Prof. Robert Angell Wins In Open Squash Tourney Prof. Robert Angell, though de- feated in the Faculty tourney, came back Friday to win the Open squash meet, triumphing over Bill Snyder, 15-12, 15-12, 15-8, in the final round. In the faculty tournament Prof. Marvin Niehus beat Angell, 3-1, but failed to get by the semi-finals in the open, losing to Snyder. In the other semi-final match Angell defeated Carl Litzenberg, 3-1. None of the student entrants were able to advance farther than the quarter-final matches. Two base hits: Rudness; Rondone, Gerlach. Three base hits: Rondone. Stolen bases: Lerner (3), Ferner (2). Sacrifice hits: Brewer, Lerner; O'- Brien. Struck out: by Larson, 11; by O'Brien, 5. Bases on balls: off Larson, 2; off O'Brien, 3. Left on bases: Michigan, 7; Wisconsin, 5. Umpires: Brannick and Snyder. Time of game: 1:57. r , t \1 ' 4 i I' ! 1 1 .dam Expert STRINGING " Complete Line of NEW RACKETS Accessories South U opp. the Den STUDENT DISCOUNT Totals ..31 3 5 27 8 2 r). _ BASEBALL RESULTS Iowa 9, Chicago 1 Notre Dame 5, Illinois 4. TENNIS SCORES Chicago 4, Wisconsin 2. Northwestern 6, Iowa 0. Minnesota 9, Carleton 0. I II FORE!! Another Golf Season is Play on your favorite at favorite prices.. FEES WEEK DAYS 18 HOLES . . ARTER 5 p.m. . SUNDAYS 18 HOLES AFTER 5 p.m. 35c 25c 50c 25c WHITE for Spring and Summer Wear * GABARD I N ES * TWEEDS * FLANNELS * SERGES : WORSTEDS Saffell & Bush lead the parade in fine quality men's wear at Season Tickets $10 the same reasonable prices. I II I I I