e THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Golf Team Loses To Spartans; Netters Nose Out Illinois 5-4 Michigan State Wins By FiVe Point Margin Brand Cards 70 In Giving Visitors Victory; Wayne Match Is Tomorrow By BEN MOORSTEIN Michigan State's highly touted golf team warranted its reputation'yester- day when it easily overcame Michigan by an 11%-6 score. The match, played over the University course, is Michigan's second defeat in seven starts. Michigan meets Wayne University here Monday afternoon at 4 p.m. in an effort to gain its first victory on home grounds. Tommy Brand, veteran Spartan - ace, captured low medal honors of the day with a par-shattering 70 as he took three points from Lynn Riess. Both were performing in the No. 3, positions. Karpinski Is Runner-Up Capt. Al Karpinski finished runner- up with a 74, two over par, and did most of the Michigan scoring in the match play. He blanked Roy Nelson, State's No. 2 man, 3-0. The prime factor in Michigan's de- feat was the ragged putting of the team. Several holes were dropped purely on this account with almost all the team being guilty at one time or another. Bill Barclay, Michigan's No. 1 start- er, paired off against State's Ed Flow- ers in a foursome which included Karpinski and Nelson. Barclay drop- ped three points to Flowers while tak- ing two holes, losing four and halving three on the first nine, and winning two, losing three and halving four on the final nine! Score Is Evened Karpinski evened the scoring at three-all by capturing three holes, losing two and halving four on the way out, and taking three losing two and splitting four coming in. In best-ball play in this foursome, Michigan won the first nine one up, went one-down on the second nine, dividing the three points evenly. The first four finished with'the score tied at 4%-41/. Brand's 70, in which he scored three birdies, was too much for sophomore Lynn Riess who turned in a good 75.. Going out, Riess took three, lost four, tied two. Coming in three were halved, Brand pulled down five and lost one. Yearnd Scores 83 No. 4 men, Michigan's Bill Yearnd and the Spartan's Bud Tansey, split their three points in half. Yearnd was three down on the first nine but came back strong to finish three up on the last nine. Both players turned in the same high score of 83. The most Michigan could do in best-ball play here was % points by halving the second nine. State took four, Michigan three and two were divided going out. SUMMARIES Michigan 6% Michigan S. 11% barclay (76) 0 Flowers (76) 3 Karpinski (74) 3 Nelson (76) 0 Riess (75) 0 Brand (70) 3 Yearnd (83) 1Y Tansey (83) 11/2 Best ball: Barclay-Karpinski, 1%/2 Riess-Yearnd %; Brand-Tansey 2%. Fred*Outdoes Himself Fred Martin, whose 182 feet 3 inches was good enough for second place in the Big Ten meet last year, threw the javelin 196 feet 72 inches yesterday to annex first place in the Quadrangular track and field meet won by Michigan yesterday at; Blocmington, Ind. IM Tourneys Get Under Way In First Round latches Are Played Off In Softball, Horseshoes And Tennis'Competition The I-M spring sports schedule swung imto full action yesterday with 26 first round games being played off in tennis,horseshoes, and soft- ball tourneys. Pi Lambda Phi, winners of last; year's fraternity tennis competition, came through as expected beating out Theta Chi 2-1 in their first match in this year's fraternity tour- ney. Psi Upsilon five defeated Trigon 2-1. Theta Xi and Phi Gamma Delta were victorious whipping Sigma Alpha Mu and Beta Theta Pi re- spectively. Sigma Chi Upset Zeta Beta Tau upset the Sigma Chi tennis team in the first round winning by a 2-1 score. Sigma Alpha Epsilon whitewashed Triangle 3-0. Other tennis matches played off yesterday came out with the fol- lowing results. Phi Epsilon Pi beat Phi Kappa Sigma 2-1. Delta Tau Delta whipped Acacia 2-1. Sigma Nu lost to Phi Sigma Delta 2-1. Kappa Delta Rho won from Phi Kappa Tau on a default. Delta Up- silon beat Kappa Nu 2-1. Lambda Chi Alpha knocked off Chi Psi 2-1. Zeta Psi defeated Sigma Phi Epsilon 2-1. Alpha Delta Phi won from Tau Kappa Epsilon 2-1. Phi Beta Delta downed Phi Kappa Psi 2-1 and Sigma Phi shut out Phi Sigma Kappa 3-0. Champs Win 3-0 In the fraternity horseshoes tour- nament, Triangle, defending cham- pions won their first tourney blank- ing Phi Beta Delta 3-0. In the other horseshoes matches, Delta Upsilon beat Alpha Tau Omega 3-0. Sigma Phi Epsilon lost to Kappa Delta Rho 3-0. Phi Sigma Delta whitewashed Delta Tau Delta 3-0. Acacia defeated Alpha Delta Phi 2-1. Zeta Psi won from Alpha Kappa Lambda 2-1. Kappa Nu beat Tau Kappa Epsilon 2-1. Beta Theta Pi defaulted to Theta Delta Chi. Chi Phi nosed out Sigma Alpha Mu 2-1 and Phi Epsilon Pi won from Psi Upsilon on a default. Varsity Tennis Squad Captures Wim Over lhi Kidwell And Woolsey Take Second Deciding Match In Two Days Of Meetf CHAMPAIGN, 111., April 23.-(Spe- cial uo the Daily)-Michigan's num- bor two tennis doubles team of John Kidwell and Steve Woolsey came through again today to give the Wol- verines a 5 to 4 decision over Illinois in a Big Ten net match. Today's win was the second in two days for the Wolverines, the Wool- sey-Kidwell combination winning both deciding matches. The duo rallied to whip the Illini team of Cy Braun and Harry Chanowitz, 2-6 6-3, 6-3. Yesterday the same men won a deciding battle giving Michigan a 4 to 3 victory over Indiana. Coach Leroy Weir's team captured four out of the six singles matches, but Illinois' three doubles combina- tions all stepped out to grab the first set of their contests. After Bill Rich and John Schuder of Illinois whipped the number one Wolverine duo of Hank Cohen and Don Percival, the number two Michigan team came from behind to sweep the second and third sets. SUMMARIES Singles-McCoy (I.) defeated Lev- enson (M), 7-5, 6-1; Percival (M) defeated Rich (I.) 6-3, 2-6, 6-4; Kid- well (M) defeated Chanowitz () 6-4, 6-1; Braun (I) defeated Slattery (M), 6-3, 4-6, 6-4; Cohen (M) defeated Schuder (I), 6-4, 6-2; Woolsey (M), beat Dean (I), 6-2, 6-3. Doubleses-Rich-Schuder (I) de- feated Cohen-Percival (M), 6-4, 6-4; Kidwell-Woolsey (M) defeated Che- nowitz-Braun (I), 2-6, 6-3, 6-3; Mc- Coy-Dean (I) defeated Levenson- Morris (M) 11-9, 6-3. Graduate Students IIncluded In I-M's A thletic Program For the first tme in its :history, the Intramural department is starting a campaign to get graduatQ students in organized intramural sports activ- ities. Inaugurating a special division for them, the department has split into two groups those belonging to profes- sional fraternities and graduate stu- dents. I The schedule planned for them in- cludes volleyball in the fall, basket- ball, bowling and squash in the win- ter season and baseball, golf, tennis and horseshoes in the spring. The regular I-M point and award. sys- tem will be used to decide the year winning teams. The Law. Club Freshmen won the volleyball tourney, the Lae Club Jun- iors hold the basketball title. Jim Tracy is the winner of the bowling singles and he and Tom Munson com- bined to take the doubles Milton Lappin is the winner of the handball singles tourney and M. A Bacon holds the title for indoor tennis singles. Floyd Black won the squash tourney. Joe Sneaks In; Shows He's Ready For Action NEW YORK, April 23.-()-JoeL o P itt DiMaggio slipped into town through the "back door" today and proceeded to show his holdout hasn't done his DETROIT, April 23.-(--Scat- batting eye any harm by clouting tering eight Detroit hits, Johnny Al- several balls out of the lot during the I len pitched the Cleveland Indians to Yankees' bitting practice. a 6 to 3 victory over the Tigers here: To avoid a "welcome committee" today. The victory, Cleveland's sec- at New York, Deadpan Dimag hopped ond straight, assured the Indians the: off the train at Newark and was met series, which ends Sunday.1 by his close friend, Joe Gould, the By winning, Cleveland remained! fight manager. Joe walked away from deadlocked with Washington and1 would-be interviewers, and completed Boston for first place in the Amer- the trip to the Yankee Stadium by: ican League. The defeat left the automobile. Bengals in seventh place with one After getting into uniform, he victory in five starts.{ greeted Manager Joe McCarthy. , The triumph was particularly sweet Nothing was said as they shook hands, for the fiery-tempered Allen because; smiled pleasantly and proceeded to it was scored at the expense of "Whis- the work of pre-game practice before tling Jake" Wade, erratic Tiger the Yanks-Senators game at the southpaw. Wade beat Allen, 1 to 0, stadium. in the final game of the 1937 season here when the Clevelander was trying for' a perfect season and his 16th .1 B consecutive victory. I ATt1TTCubs Ilown Cardinals; LAUGH Cb CHICAGO; April 3.-(P)-The Chi- cago Cubs, behind the brilliant four- CLARENCE E. MUNN hit pitching of Larry French, shut Michigan Football Coach out the St. Louis Cardinals. 4 to 0. Coaching at Albright College in today before 7,770 spectators at Wrig- Coacing t Abrigt Clleg inley Field. 1936, we devised a system whereby yheCd. players on the team would get plenty The Cub southpaw never was in of leg work. The plan was that serious trouble and the four Cardinal everytime they fumbled or made a safeties, two by Mickey Owen and glaring error, they'd be forced to do the others by Enos Slaughter and a lap around the track. Stu Martin, all came in separate frames. A little white pooch by the name of Mickey used to hang B r n Back Phii around the practice field, and Bees urn Back YhrlCs when the boys started doing their BOSTON, April 3.-(A)-Spurred laps, he'd follow right along. by a clear day and the cheers of 10,- After a particularly bad practice 180 fans, Boston's hustling Bees of- one day, Dick Riffle, who made ficially opened the National League the little All-America in 1936 baseball season in beantown today by after leading the East in scormg, turning back Philadelphia, 3 to 1. turned to a teammate and said: Lou Fette, who beat the Phillies "This guy Munn's a pretty tough three times last year and has yet guy isn't he?" to lose a game to them, limited! "Sure is," repied his perspiring the opposition to four hits while his friend. teammates were making their six Riffle hapened to glance at his hits count. feet and there stood Mickey, the pooch-also panting. Pirates Get Fifth Win "Yeh," continued Riffle, "and there's the proof. We're not the PITTSBURGH, April 23.----The only one's getting it. Look at the Pittsburgh Pirates grabbed a tighter pooch-even he's losing weight." hold atop the National League today -_by putting a 6 to 2 slug on their y-favorite fall guys, the Cincinnati Giants Take 8- ff/ln Reds. It was the fifth consecutive victory in the current campaign for BROOKLYN, April 23.-(P)-John- the Bucs. ny McCarthy clouted one of Rookie Johnny Rizzo, Pittsburgh's rookie Bill Posedel's pitches over the right left fielder, teed off a couple of 450 field wall in the seventh inning foot triples to the centerfield fence today to break a tie and give the New York Giants an 8 to 5 victory over the Dodgers. Up to that point, it was a hair- raiser game, with the Giants taking a 5-0 lead in the first three innings on Jim Ripple's homer in the first and a three-run splurge in the third. COLLEGE BASEBALL Indiana 7, Oho State 5. Purdue 5, Minnesota 3. Chicago 3, Wisconsin 2. Hillsdale 30; Adrian 0. 'Iowa 7, Northwestern 2. I 1 5 r ET0I :1 Cam. to spark three runs each in the first and fifth innings. Red Sox Beat Athletics PHILADELPHIA. April 23.-(P)- Behind the effective pitching of the veteran southpaw, Lefty Grove, the Boston Red Sox today ruined the Athletics' home opening by winning, 10 to 4, before a crowd of 10,895. Within five minutes after Governor George Earle had tossed out the opening ball, the slugging Red Sox had chased Edgar Smith from the mound to give Grove a three-run lead. 1! Ien Tames Tigers,. Gomez, Yanks . + r I __ LEARN TO DANCE Social Dancing taught daily. Ter.'ace Garden Dancing Studio. Wuerth Theatre Bldg.Ph. 9695 2nd Floor i Cunningham Race After Loses First 21 Victories 1 LAWRENCE, Kans., April 23-(R)-- Eight new records flashed from the gloomy setting of the 16th annual Kansas Relays today, but missing from the list was a mile mark expect- ed to be dug up by the spiked shoes of Glen Cunningham, Archie San Ro- mani, Don Lash or Gene Venzke. In fact, instead of breaking his own meet record of 4:27.7, the great Cun- ningham found himself suffering his first defeat in 22 starts, with San Romani breasting the tape in the rather apathetic time of 4:23. TEN-mNIS rIr RACQUET RESTR IN Don't handicap your game racquet that isn't "fit." Br and let us do an expert jo for you. RESTRINGINGS $2,00- $8.00 ARMOUR. VICTOR, JUNEMAN STRINGS 4GI NG e with a 'ing it in A on it !^1 .. . .. . 11 11 "For the best in