WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAIGE THREE Coach Hoyt Selects 23 Trackmen - I Veteran Team Regains Crown 11 1 , Awarded Trophy Prepares For Columbus Tilt Miller Picked To Compete After Surprise Effort Against Regularsj Coach Charlie Hoyt yesterday named the 23 man squad which will defend Michigan's Big Ten outdoor track and field title Friday and Sat- urday at Columbus. The squad announced by Hoyt will be composed for the most part of vet- erans who have tasted Conference championship competition either in outdoor title affairs of past years or at the Conference indoor meet at Chicago this past winter. Steve Mason, sophomore quarter miler, whose back injury kept him out of the Indiana meet is slated to be back in action in the quarter and 220-yard dash. Bill Miller, one of the few men on the squad entering his first Conference meet, will make the trip on the strength of his spar- kling performance in the 440 trials before the Indiana meet. Beats Aikens, Stiles He nosed out Captain Frank Aikens and Fred Stiles to gallop to a 49.3 for the distance and showed well in the Indiana and Illinois meets, placing a close third behind Stan Birleson and Harvey Patton to score a slam for Michigan in the 440. Moreau Hunt having experienced leg trouble in the last two meets has taken the week oft under orders to stay off his feet but will be back in uniform at Columbus where he hopes to make up for a bad outdoor season. Pole Vaulters Stay Home Hoyt will use all three of his javelin men, Dworsky, Stone, and Martin, in hopes of picking up some badly needed points in the javelin, but apparently could see no hope in the pole vault as the roster for the trip does not include a single pole vaulter. Michigan's great mile-relay team will in all probability be the same four men who snatched the 1935 Con- ference championship out of the fire, Fred Stiles, Frank Aikens, Harvey Patton and Stan Birleson. There is a chance that Bob Osgood will replace Stiles, depending on how Osgood's game leg feels after his hurdle races. Have Easy Workout The Varsity squad loafed through another easy workout today as they strove to be in top form for Satur- day's meet. The men who will make the trip are SamStoller, Fred Stiles, Steve Mason, Bob Osgood, Moreau Hunt, Stan Birleson, Harvey Patton, Bill Miller, Howard Davidson, Ben Stalr, Captain Frank Aikens, Paul Gorman, Harry O'Connell, Clayton Brelsford, Ray Fink, Walt Stone, Bill Staehle, John Townsend, Skip Etchells, Mike Savage, Leonard Dworsky, Ed Stone and Fred Martin. Frosh Tracksters Bow To Hawkeyes Ken Doherty's freshman track crew suffered their first defeat of the year as they fell victim to a powerful Iowa University freshman aggregation in a quadrangular telegraphic meet be- tween Iowa, Indiana, Wisconsin ano Michigan. Michigan was second, de- feating Indiana and Wisconsin by a decisive margin. "Big Bill" Watson was the standout of the yearlings annexing two first and two second places to take indi- vidual high scoring honors for tl meet with 16 points. Watson's firsts wei min the bioad .ump and shot put. his seconds in the high jump and discus. WA son tosse the shot 4 feet 4/2 inches. Fred Osberg pulled down the only other Michigp'n first in the javelin with a toss of 169 feet. The final standings were Iowa, 62/2; Michigan, 54; Wisconsin, 34; Indiana, 16. Major Leagues the I PRESS ANGLE: By GEORGE J.ANDROS .. Osgood Invited ... [HOUGH he never has run the event in competition, Bob Os- good has been invited to compete in the 400-meter hurdles in the Third Annual Princeton Invitational Track meet to be held June 13 at Palmer Stadium. The tall junior star will undoubtedly accept the chance to compete against the nation's finest performers if unforeseen difficulties do not arise in the meantime. Osgood, who against Illinois ran the 120-yard highs in the near-record time of :14.3, should be a success in the long grind in that he is a quarter- miler of no little ability, running the third leg on the Michigan quartet that won the American mile-relay championship in the Penn Relays and handing anchor-man Stan Birleson a six-yard lead. It will be remembered that Glenn Hardin, who was America's best in the 400-meter hurdles in the 1932 Olympics, was a national college champion in both the quarter-mile run and the shorter hurdles. The Princeton carnival will again consist of very few events-but seven being on the program to date. The field in each event is held to a mini- mum number of the country's very best. It was in the first running of the meet in 1934 that Glenn Cunning- ham astounded the world with his 4:06.7 mile and Ben Eastman turned in his 1:49.8 half-mile. Malloy's Jinx. . WOODY MALLOY came within five strokes of beating an old jinx that has pursued him in his three years on Michigan's champion gol: team yesterday, in the Big Ten tour- nament, but again he bowed to Capt Chuck Kocsis. A real star in his own right, Woody has been forced to take the back seat to Kocsis, and last year to Johnny Fischer. He has played consistently fine golf in his career on Michigan's team, but every time he has met Kocsis or Fischer, he has lost --us- ually by slipping below his regulai form. To Defend Big Varsity Nine Interfraternity coif I Gets In Shape Is New I-M Sport I nrrrnygfm eipd Interfraternity golf makes its de- r or Last TripIbut on the campus at11a.m..Satur- day morning, when players in the tournament scheduled by the Intra- Fate Of Team Rests With mural Sports department, are sched- Fishman And Larson As uled to tee off. It is the first time that such an' Season Nears End event. has been scheduled and the adoption of interfraternity golf as a; Dangerously close to their first Big permanent feature of the Intramural Ten title in eight years, Michigan's program depends entirely on the suc- Wolverines yesterday went through a cess of Saturday's meet. At the pres- long workout in preparation for this ent time sixteen fraternities have en- tered teams, which makes a total of week's road trip that lists single 64 entrants, each team being com- gamcs at Northwestern and Wiscon- posed of four men. sin. The teams have been grouped into Coach Fisher's aggregation of fence foursomes, and they will be sent out busters are dangerously close in that at seven minute intervals beginning with only four more Conference promptly at 11 a.m. The number orne games left to play they can easily players of each team have been meet up with a world of trouble in grouped together in order that the three of them. The Wisconsin club foursomes may be composed of play- holds wins over both Illinois and ers of equal skill. Iowa, and the Hawkeyes, who will play the year's final pair of games DAVIS CUP TEAM PICKED here. are themselves expecting to win NEW YORK, May 19.- P) --The this year's championship. United States Davis Cup selection WNho Said SLACKS! We've got them- CHECKS- PLAIDS STRIPES - SOLID COLORS - PLAIN or PLEATED FRONTS den Title $1.95 $2.45 $2.95 SPORT SHIRTS to go with them. at $1.00 and $1.50 Also SPORT ANKLE SOX 35c and 50c Chuck Kocsis, with a 286 total for 72 holes, regained the West- ern Conference individual golf title yesterday nosing out teammate Woody'Malloy by five strokesat Chicago's Kildeer Country club. Kocsis, who won the title as a soph- omore, was defeated by Michigan's' Johnny Fischer last year. Boyle Pitches Chemists To . 10-2 Victory John Jordan, husky freshman center from Evanston, Ill., became the 12th winner of the Chicago Alumni trophy presented last night at the Union. Jordan was select- ed by the football coaching staff and is conceded an excellent chance of winning a starting berth next fall. Netters Leave For Conference TourneyToday Coach John Johnstone will set out or Chicago at 1 p.m. today with four >f his best tennis players in an at- tempt to wrest the Big Teri tennis rnwn from the rasp of the Unver- Fisher announced yesterday that he? would start Herm. "Iron-Man" Fish- man against Northwestern Friday and his captain, the dependable Berger Larson, in the Badger tilt the follow- ing day. Larson has already defeat- ed Wisconsin once this season, allow-f ing them six hits while his mates put together enough blows to take a 3-2 decision. So far this year Michigan has won 14 games and has dropped but five, four of these by only a single run. This gives the Wolverines a .737 won and lost percentage for the year while last season the club took but 11 games all season and lost several more. Nine games are left on the 1936 schedule, five of them to be played here. Included in the latter group are battles with Western State, which Monday beat Wisconsin, 18-5, Michi- gan State, which has won 12 of 14 games this year; Waseda University of Japan and the two games with Iowa. Fisher said yesterday these l last two tilts will probably be played June 2 and 3. The team will leave Thursday for Northwestern, returning Sunday- still in first place if another pair of victories can be added to the record. committee tonight named Wilmer Al- lison of Austin, Tex., Bryan (Bitsy) Grant of Atlanta, and the young Cal- ifornians, Donald Budge and Gene Mako as the team to oppose Australia in the North American zone Davis Cup finals at the Germantown, Pa. cricket club May 30, 31, and June 1.__ READ THE WANT ADS i, 1 'i ad ea1c NOW ded to ce BREEZE t- tom-com- . g Main .: 1Z winwhite, -.-" ;h to air- BURTON'S - OVER SHOES 115 South Main St. DD.'s Rout Doe's In Independent Loop Zeta Psi's Forfeit Only Tilt; * Our famous cus fort Model X last shock-absorbin Spring*'Arch. Now perforated throug cool your feet. Behind the three hit pitching of Albert Boyle, the chemistry depart- ment yesterday defeated the physiol- ogy department, 10-2, and thus movedj a notch farther up in the faculty di- vision of the intramural baseballj 5 t I tournament. The physiology department scored Trailing Kocsis by three strokes at its two runs in the first inning on two ttheed last n3 holes, ando needing a on he astnie hlesto iethe Wolf- walks, two hits and a stolen base. verine captain who had already The chemistry department immedi- finished, Malloy lost two more stroke: ately retaliated, however, with a four by turning in a 38, three over par. run barrage which was augmented in Koesis' putter, the same one that the second, fourth and fifth innings let Fred Haas and Pick Wagner beat by one, two and three additional runs him and allowed him to qualify foi respectively. Earl Lovenheim, of the the National Open, was functioning winners, hit a home run in the first correctly the last two days, it seems inning. It brought him a 31-35, 66, Monday The D.D.'s and the Doe's played the ,morning and continued behaving well only game in the independent divi- through the last three rounds. sion, the D.D.'s winning by a 15-6 * score. Sol Stein pitched for the win- Eastern Intrigue ? ? ? ners,,and Harold Falls pitched for the, losers, The game was one of the play- VIC ZOBEL, out at Jones Beach in >ffs for first place. 'New York, is planning a National Chuck McHugh hit a home run with Outdoor Intercollegiate Swimming the bases loaded in the last of the meet for June 13-15, but unless he fifth, his sixth of the season out of changes the date to a later one, the =even hits, to win a 4-1 pitchers' bat- meet will be a washout for the simple tie for Chi Phi over Alpha Kappa reason that classes in most of the Lambda. The Chi Phi's got only four midwestern and western colleges will 'its off of John Shannon, but their still be in session. sity of Chicago team. The players aking the trip are Capt. HowieI Kahn, Miller Sherwood, Johnny Rod- iguez and Jesse Flick. The Wolverines can hardly be called a title contender since they were able to scoreaonly two points in the neet last year, both of these com- ing as the result of Sherwood's fine )lay, and the team, if anything, is veaker than that of last season. Captain-elect Sherwood has the )est record of any player on the team ;his year but his condition is still a :natter for conjecture since he was )nly able to leave the hospital last Monday. Captain Kahn, Michigan's number >ne man and the player upon whom ;he Wolverines' chances rest, seems to stand little show in the Conference since he has already been defeated >y Moll, Leavens, Nihousen and Bickel .n Big Ten meets. I- - CALLS FOR WRESTLERS Coach Cliff Keen requests that all students interested in wrestling be present at a meeting to be held at 7:30 p.m. today at the Union. I aIi WALK _______________________________________ ________ ". HALF B HALF MAKES pitcher held the AK.L.'s to two, both in the same inning. It was a third-j place playoff game. The remaining games played werej ill in the third and fourth-place )layoff divisions. Phi Kappa Psi de- feated Phi Sigma Delta, 9-3, Pi Lamb- Ja Phi downed Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 10-6, Sigma Phi Epsilon beat Tri- angle, 15-9, and Lambda Chi Alpha profited, 1-0, from Zeta Psi's forfeit of their game. Mr. Zobel is either unaware of the fact that such a condition results. or he is deliberately trying to give the eastern swimmers a chance to win a few places. In the last three Na- tional Collegiate meets, all won by Michigan, the East has taken exactly four first places out of a possible 30. and three of them were in 1934. Michian will have some men in the event should Mr. Zobel decide to make the meet later in June. AMERICAN Detroit 4, Washington 2. St. Louis 8. Philaelphia 4. Boston 4, Chicago 2. New York 10, Cleveland 4. NATIONAL Boston 6, Chicago 5. St. Louis, Philadelphia - Rain. Pittsburgh, New York - Rain. Cincinnati, Brooklyn - Rain. 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