X ,MAY 19, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY sammus"Now Varsity Golfers Take Second Place In BigTen Relinquish Title For First Time In Six Tourneys Northwestern Cops Crown As Richardson Takes Low Medal Honors (Continued from Page 11 his state amateur title, turned in the hottest round of the tournament, a par 72 after a poor start, to share fifth place with Saunders. Another Illini player, Johnny Hobart, wound up with 309 for sixth. Northwestern put together a team total of 1,244 strokes in acquiring a, leg on the new Thomas C. Trueblood trophy given by Michigan's honorary golf coach. To go with Richardson's 301 and Kostelecky's 304, sophomore Frank Perpich contributed 317 strokes and Jim Marek had 322. Michigan, winner of five straight individual and team crowns through the sensational shooting of. Johnny Fischer and Chuck Kocsis, landed in second place with a 1,253 team count.' Michigan 72 hole scores: Allen Saunders 78-76-79-75-308. Alfred Karpinski 78-78-81-80-317. Bill Barclay 78-76-85-75-314. William Warren 83-76-80-75-314. John Emery 81-77-86-79-323. Three For Four Gives Bell .476 Percentage Two lads who had big days with the willow yesterday took over two-thirds control of the American League bat- ting race. Beau Bel, St. Louis Browns outfielder, hit three for four against the Senators and added 14 points to his average for a first-pace total of .476, while Lyn Lary, of the Indians, got five for five against Boston to pick up 38,points and move into third place. Gillie Brack, of the idle Dodgers, and Johnny Mize, of the Cardinals, moved into second and third place in the National League as Al Todd, Pi- Leads Fisher's Sluggers rate catcher, droppedi The first three meni Player and Club G Bell, Browns....20 Medwick, Cardinals 23 Cronin, Red Sox . .17 Lary, Indians .....18 Brack, Dodgers . . .21 Mize, Cardinals . . .16 into fourth. in each league: AB A H -Pct. 82 15 39 .476 95 22 43 .453 71 12 31 .437 79 18 34 .430 86 20 34 .395 64 12 25 .391, Danny Smick, slugging first baseman, will be out to raise his batting average at the expense of Kermit Aase, Gopher hurler today. Danny was pounding the ball at a .400 clip until the Varsity made its last road trip and Smick found the brand of hurling turned in by the Illinois, Indiana and Purdue pitch- ers to be too tough for him to solve. Chii Psi Victory Seen In Battle For I-M Title By capturing two basketball cham- pionships and showing almost equal} power in all other events the Chi Psi fraternity has the intramural cham- pionship trophy practically on ice. With a powerful baseball and tennis team still able to pick up points, there. is 'no doubt, that when the final tab- ulation of the standings is made, the State Street boys will be far out in front. At present Theta Chi fraternity hias the first place position, but both their tennis and baseball teams have been eliminated from further compe- tition. The only way they would be able to add more points to their score would be by capturing the Sigma Del- ta Psi crown. Psi Upsilon, which has finished in the second place position fo rthe past two years, is hot on the trail of Theta Chi, and should be able to pass them without any trouble. With their baseball, tennis, and horseshoe teams still in competition the Psi U's are the outstanding contenders for taking second place honors. Big Ten Track T Into 'Gots'An Several Squads Prepared To Threaten Michigan's Claims To Supremacy By ROY HEATH With the opening gun of the Big Ten outdoor track championships only two days off coaches and train- ers in the circuit are leaving no stone unturned, no possibilities untried, as they muster every available ounce of their track and field power for the descent on Ferry Field Friday and Saturday. For a few teams it will be, barring accidents on the road here and back, a nice trip with a minimumnof exer- cise involved. Saturday will find most of these teams admiring the color- ful proceedings from the bleacher seats. For three or four outfits it will still be a nice trip and if all goes well certain individual competitors will collect some bronze, silver or Coach Ken Doherty of the track team, Sam Stoller, Varsity sprint- er and Phil Diamond, Michigan track authority and announcer at home track meets, will speak to- night over WJR, Detroit, at 10:15 p.m. Harry Wismer will interview them on his regular evening sports broadcast. gold bric-abrac. Still, they can't be counted out until Sunday morning and with some breaks in a game where anything can and often does happen, these teams may kick over the traces and walk off with first money. Michigan, the host at the get-to- gether, will get nothing much in the way of travel but as the situation sizes up at the present, the Wolver- ines appear to be the only team with anything like a cinch on the team championship plus a good share of the individual first place money. With the track teams in the Con- ference divided pretty much as any other group in any field of activity is divided, that is, into the "Have Gots" and the "Haven't Gots," it is fairly safe to shinny out on the greasy limb with a few prognostications on how the various track machines op- erating around the loop will finish and what they have in the way of ma- terial with which to make their bids. Starting with the tailenders or the "Haven't Gots" we give you PURDUE: Held without a point in the indoor Conference meet, the Boil- rmakers can only be nosed out of the basement by Chicago or North- western. Even this is improbable. Best bets to garner them a few points will be Bob Leman in the low hurdles, Art Bodeau in the 880, and Roger Delong in the sprints. CHICAGO: With the exception of their able quarter-miler George Hal- °row and Matt Kobak, broad-jump- er, top-flight track material is seldom seen around the Midway this season. Halcrow was third in the indoor con- ference this season and has turned in creditable times outdoors. He may finish anyplace from first to fifth. The same thing applies to Kobak. Only other Maroon chance is that they may be able to scare up enough 440 men for a relay team. NORTHWESTERN: They finished below Chicago indoors with only a brace of points but they may better this total somewhat outdoors but here to there is nothing indicated. Henry Keitel will, in all probability, be the only Wildcat competitor left on the track by Saturday afternoon. He is good for a place and an outside shot at first money in the wide open 440 and 220. They could enter a relay team but with Keitel in the furlong it wouldn't be worth the time. MINNESOTA: This isn't football' and the Golden Gophers will be lucky to stay out of the cellar Saturday. They still have weightmen Dominic Krezowski and Irving Goodman. The former won them the shotput crown outdoors last year but that was 1936 B.W. (before Watson). Bob Hub- bard may bring them a point or two in the high jump and broad jump. Jewelry and Watch Repairing HALLER'S Jewelry State at Libertyf eams Divided d "Haven't Gots' 'Michigan Nine Seeks Victory Over Gophers Varsity Out To End Losing Streak; Fishman, Aase Are Starting Pitchers Seeking to bring up their season's record to a .500 mark and at the same time snap out of a losing streak during which they have won but one game in their last five, Coach Ray Fisher's nine will open a two-game series with a weak hitting Minnesota team at 4 p.m. today on the Ferry Field diamond. Coach Fisher has named Herman: Fishman, as his starting pitcher while Kermit Aase is the logical choice to start on the mound for the Gophers. Aase turned in an excellent job of hurling against Wisconsin last week, holding the Badgers hitless for the first six innings and allowing them only two safe blows for the nine stan- zas although Wisconsin won the game by a 3-1 score. Called 'Hitless Wonders' Minnesota, self dubbed the "hitless wonders," have also found the Big Ten competition pretty tough after a good start, and the Gophers have a .500 percentage with three games won and three lost. Poor batting has been the cause of their mid-season slump, and their team batting average at the present time is hovering around the .100 mark. The Gophers have two outstanding players in Captain Ted Brissman, a smart catcher with a good arm and Ed Roy, a very good centerfielder defensively and a pretty fair man at the plate. Brewer Is Still Out Don Brewer, spark plug of the Varsity infield is still limping on a, bad ankle and his regular shortstop I duties will probably be handled by, sophomore Pete Lisagor. The start- I ing left fielder has not been named and any outfielder on the squad is apt to be found in this position when the game starts. Captain Kim Wil- liams, one of the possible starters, is, laid up with a bad cold and will be unable to play. Yesterday afternoon's rain forced the cancellation of the scheduled; practice session. The probable batting order and! line-ups for today's contest are: Will Run Quarter-Mile On Stan Birleson's shoulder's will rest Michigan's hopes of a win in the quarter-mile run this week-end in the Big Ten Conference Track Meet at Ferry Field. Having run the distance consistently under 50 seconds this year, the long-striding senior from Muskegon Heights, took first in the indoor Conference meet earlier this season and is conceded a fine chance to repeat in the out door running. He also ran on the championship mile-relay t e a m which set a new record at the in- door meet. His best time is 49.2 sec- onds. In The Majors American League Detroit .........302 001 010 7 12 1 Philadelphia .... 010 202 03x 8 10 3 Wolverine Netters May Upset Dope, Thinks Coach Johnstone By ART BALDAUF To the pessimists who are coming to the Conference tennis meet to- 'morrow and the next two days to see Chicago and Northwestern finish int that order with Michigan maybe third, don't come. You may be dis- appointed. That, in essence, is the advice Coach John Johnstone handed down yesterday to those who would lightly discharge the thought of 'the Wol- verines placing very high in the 1937 meet. Has Reasons Lined Up With a "don't give up the ship (too soon)" attitude he opened up a dog- eared pamphlet, pointed to severall lines and said, "there are the reasons why we can't be counted out of the race.'' Reason number one was Michigan'sj record in the last six toureys, start- ing with the 1930 season. In that year they walked off with the cham- pionship. The next two years went by without the Wolverines doing much. In 1933 they started well Freshmen TopI Wisconsin; Set Track Records In the last meet of the Michigan freshman track season last week-end with Wisconsin, exceptional strength was shown by the yearlings in the hurdles and in the distance runs. Al- though they did not do so well in the triangular telegraphic meet with Ohio and Wisconsin two weeks ago, they were able to come back and nose out Wisconsin 66/2 to 64% last Saturday because. of their strong events. In the Wisconsin meet seven new freshman records were set. Stan Kelley, hurdler from Lakewood, O., broke the records set by Bob Os- good in both the low and high hur- dles. In the 120 highs he lowered the old record of 15.4 to 15.1. In the 220 lows he shattered the old record of 24.6 with a 24.2. In the half mile Tommy Jestor and Dye Hogand both beat the existing freshman record of 1:57.7. Chicago........000 000 000 0 New York ......020 001 Olx 4 St. Louis .......101 310 000 Washington .....050 000 011, Cleveland .......100 011 004 Boston,.........000 000 400 6 7 7 4 6 8 11 13 12 10 Osgood And Stoller Will Appeer As Guest Artists ESCANABA, May 18.-GP)-Robert Osgood, hurdler and captain, and Sam Stoller, sprinter, of the Univer- sity of Michigan track team, will be the feature attractions at the annual high school relay carnival which will be held at the Escanaba high school athletic field on Memorial Day, it was announced today. The appearance of Osgood and Stoller at the local carnival follows those of other stars. 1 0 3 4 2 3 2 0 1 0 NEW STYLES Fl I ! Michigan Lisagor, ss Peckinpaugh, 3b Beebe, c Uricek, 2b Kremer, cf Smick, lb Campbell, rf Heyliger, lf Fishman, p Minnesota Lindberg, rf Uram, 2b Lundquist, lb King, If Roy, cf Brissman, c Lee, ss May, 3b Aase, p National League Philadelphia . . . .100 000 000 1 Pittsburgh ......200 000 000 2 New York ........20 000 001 3 St. Louis........020 000 02x 4 6 6 8 9 Headquarters for ARROW SHIRTS State Street on the Campus Swimming Doesn't Make Kirar Forget School,_Reporter Finds Tickets for the Big Ten track and field meet which will be held here Friday and Saturday may be obtained at the Athletic Adminis- tration building at the single price of 40 cents for students and others. The brisk rate of sale forecasts heavy attendance for the meet. Boston dt Cincinnati-rain. Brooklyn at Chicago-rain. RACING BILL IS KILLED LANSING, May 18.-()-The dog racing bill was killed by the Senate today. TYPEWRITI Nu MIMEOGRAPH I NG ,romptry and neatly done by.expci.- anced operators at moderate pf-bi 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State btreec By BETSEY ANDERSON { In spite of the fact that he holdsj the intercollegiate crowns in the 50- yard free style, the 100-yard freestyle and is a member of the highly suc- cessful Michigan freestyle triumvi- rate, Ed Kirar is very reticent about talking about himself. The tall, blond engineer who takes his school work very seriously, finally admitted, though, that swimming was his hobby. In fact, it was one of the reasons he came to Michigan, he declared, the other being the high rating of the engineering college here. Starts Splashing Early His swimming career started at the age of six when his two older brothers had gone out for the swimming teams at their high schools so he decided to follow their footbeats., He went out for swimming in high school (and Kenosha Senior High, Wis. called him "champ") and swam against Ray Walters who would often beat him. But last year, Ed made up for this by defeating Walters in the dual meet with Iowa and in the+ Big Ten meet. He also swam at the University of Wisconsin uring his freshman year. Johnny Weissmuller is the swim- ming personality he admires most and he named Medica his favorite collegiate star. "And Tom Haynie is going to take his place as a national swimming champion," the blue-eyed natator predicted. Likes Ohio State He enjoys swimming against Peter Fick the most as an individual op- ponent, while the Ohio State swim- mers are the team opponents he en- invcmnctAnd if hP.'s still ximminsr 24,500 miles to participate in swim- ming meets and has decided that Mil- } waukee, Wis., is his favorite city in Ithe country. He intends to go into hydraulics when he finishes school and is taking 1 up civil engineering now. And he likes all of his courses, especially waterworks.5 Gets Up Early-Sometimes The serious minded, twenty-two year old engineer enjoys the distinc- tion of being one of the few Mich- igan students who aren't very en- thused about sleeping and eating. In fact, he even likes getting up in the morning. But when he does eat he likes steak dinners and strawberry shortcake is his favorite dessert. Next to swimming, football and baseball are his favorite sports. And 'he's a strong supporter of the Cubs when it comes to professional base- ball although as a spectator he en- joys watching good swimming the most. Horseback riding is another sport he enjoys-the result of the cowboy tendencies in him cropping out, he claims. The good looking swimming star claimed that he thought the prettiest girls were at Wisconsin and admitted that he rarely dated on campus. i mosk- I 306-10 So. Main St., Ann Arbor Phone 4503 YOUNG MEN'S WASH x SACKS You Arrow forma dresse collar the n of dis ARB? Genuine SANFORIZ ED Shrunk Cr They're well made, full cut perfect fitting pants in Sanforized Shrunk Prints in cov- ered grounds, checks and plaids; also San- forized White Ducks. Sizes 30 to 42. I tftinqham Tfabrics tailored by L. GREIF & BRO., Inc. MEN'S SANFORIZED BGash Pants Better Grades at I " . a ? $: '~ $~ '~ ,'z /'' - . w r:>: