THE MICiIGAN lDAILY , 11 Slated To Play In I-M Matches Independents, Fraternities And Faculty Will Meet In Tourney Saturday Two hundred golfers representing fraternities, independent organiza- tions and the faculty are scheduled to compete in the first all-campus intramural golf tournament this Saturday orb the University golf course. The first foursome will tee off at ten o'clock and there will be a group leaving the first tee every seven min- ates thereafter until shortly after four in the afternoon. IsU First General Meet This is the first year that the meet has been open to independents and faculty and the number of entries have therefore greatly exceeded either of the three tournaments held. Each group has entered a five-man team and the four lowest will count in the final tally. Phi Psi's Have Won Two Social and professioral fraternities will vie for a rotating cup. Phi Kappa Psi has two legs on the trophy award- ed to social Greek letter societies hav- ing won it the last two years. Individual medals will be given members of the winning faculty and independent teams. Gold medals will be awarded to the individual making the longest drive off the first tee and the oe taking least number of putts on the fifth green. Members of the freshmen and var- sity golf squads will not be allowed to compete. Yankees Cop Lead As TigersWin, 4-1 WASHINGTON, May Ii.-P)--The Detroit Tigers, behind 7-hit pitching by Vernon Kennedy, chased the Sen- ators out of first place today, winning 4 to 1. New York moved into the League lead by defeating Cleveland. Kennedy's fine .pitching, snapped Washington's winning streak of 7 straight games.:. The Tiger .hurler. had a shut bout until the ninth, when Stone doubled' and scored on Myer's single. Harry Kelley, recently acquired from the Athletics, was the losing pitcher. MUNGO BLANKS CUBS CHICAGO, May, 11.-( P) -Van Lingle Mungo had his speed and con-' trol for the first time this season and blanked the Cubs with seven hits as he pitched the Brooklyn Dodgers to a 7 to 0 victory. By IRVIN LISAGOR_______ EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fourth of a series of columns conducted by the Junior candidates for the sport editorship next year. Today's is written by j Roy Heath who has been engaged in covering track. ". of all sad words of tongue or pen , The saddest are these: "It might have been." N0 PACKED STADIA will ever echo the name of Richard Hays as a long striding kid puts in a winning kick at the finish of some classic mile race. No flamboyant head line will ever carry the news that another Kansas boy erased the records of Cunningham and San Romani as if they were figures written in water. Richard Hays is dead . . . killed by a new pair of; track shoes. A third great miler was on his way out of Kansas, bent on following the burning spike marks of two other onetime Kansas high school boys across the cinder- paths of the world. The dusty, wind-ridden plains that spawned Cunningham and San Romani were preparing Richard Hays to carry on their proud tradition. But he is dead. To that lanky boy on his Kansas farm, the proud exploits of "Galloping Glenn" and his "Shadow" were all that were worth reading in a newspaper.] Republican martyr Alf Landon and his pre-doomed bid for the White House; paled into insignificance. Richard Hays wanted to be a miler.+ Hays' daily life would have been enough training for the average ' man but it wasn't running. In the late afternoon he would run the length of a section and back to his home, his long stride carrying him along with the effortless grace that characterizes a great runner. In 1936 Richard Hays entered Russel High School and made his first track team. His coach looked at him once and knew he had a natural. He sent Hays as his team's lone entry to the Kansas Relays Interscholastic meet, tho greatest high school event in the state. Hays' only equipment was a track suit and a pair of old sneakers. Track shoes, he said, hurt his feet. The record for the one-mile run was held by Glenn Cunningham. set at 4:22.3 by the mile king when he was a senior in high school. It had stood unthreatened and no one was ever expected to approach it. San Romani hadn't nor-had any other winner. The field lined up for the start and at the gun Richard hays swung into the easy stride that had eaten up the dirt road. By the end of the second lay a hush had fallen on the field. The kid with the tennis shoes was leading the field by 40 yards. He passed the half- mile post in 2:10.5. Visiting university coaches and runners, assembled from all parts of the country for the Kansas Relays the following day, watched in awe. They said he couldn't hang on to that blistering pace. But he did hang on. He won in 4:22.4 and a high school freshman had come within a tenth of a second of replacing the great Glenn's 4:22.3. That was the Spring of 1937. The spring of 1938 rolled around and entries for the scholastic section of the Kansas Relays began to roll into Kansas track coach Bill Hargiss' office.. Bill had coached Cunningham in his collegiate career. He would coach Hays if Hays came to Kansas and he was looking for Hays' entry. The time grew short and Bill Hargiss wrote Hays' high school coach. The heart-broken reply came a few days later. Richard Hays' would never run another mile. He was dead. He had wanted to break Cunning- hain's mile record which he had missed by such a narrow margin the year before. Spiked' shoes might mean a little more speed. The shoes pinched him but he thought they would break in and he would get used to them. He practiced in the shoes, despite the discomfort, until they wore blisters on his feet.. He kept on running in them. They would be o.k... . they might mean the difference. One day he could no longer stand them. His right foot was swollen until he could hardly walk. The doctor said "blood poison." He went to bed. A transfusion was ordered. Richard Hays died. A third great miler may yet come off those dusty prairies, swinging along with a wind-bread stride that sweeps records aside like so many shavings. Myaybe another farm boy someplace else is dreaming the dreams that Rich- ard Hays dreamed -and would have made come true. But Richard Hays won't. He died Netters Return For Comeback This Weekend Will Meet Badgers Today, Ohio Saturday; Captain Levenson Faces Bucks Michigan's Varsity netters, fallen from the heights during the tempor- ary loss of their captain, Neil Leven- son, resume and conclude their home schedule this weekend at the Palmer Field courts. The Wolverines are hosts at a tri- angular meet this weekend which will see both the Northwestern and Ohio State squads taking part with the Weirmen. Today the Varsity plays Northwestern. Tomorrow Ohio State and the Wildcats clash, and Satur- day the Wolverines return to action against the Buckeyes. Game time today is 2 p.m. The return to action of Capt. Neil Levenson is still uncertain. Although out for over a week now with an in- fected foot, he felt much improved yesterday and hoped to take over his number one position today. Coach Leroy Weir was doubtful if he would start, however, preferring to keep him out of play for another day or so if he were not completely recovered. In the case he does not appear all the players will be moved up a notch, Don Percival will take over the num- ber one position, with John Kidwell Ed Morris, Tom Slattery, Hank Coher and Steve Woolsey probably follow- ing in that order. The Varsity will be up against th second stiffest competition in the league this afternoon. Coach Pau] Bennett's men, runners-up for the Conference title last season, have lost but two matches this season, both tc the championship Chicago squad. Crisler Ends Spring Practice Satur Wolverine grid ailments which and insufficient blocking out in front tors as past reputation m caused a chronic bogging down for f he runner on end sep stppe Out of all this treatmen the last five years have been diag- ltsofplysbeorfhe saredlvrteh s mredtwit. nosed, treated and the patient is verine has emerged wt. about to be turned loose before the Now an end or back can snare'a claws and a better attitude tuning up program next fall. Satur-a witou fear terrific ar dysdrill will climax the spring the moment he gathers" it in. not be a world.beaterx aset. xLast but perhaps first in import- healthy. Only next- fall's The first phase to come under ob- ance is that the team morale shaken can prove how effective servation was the Michigan block- and perhaps crushed by the long the medicine brewed by C ing which had been definitely sub-par enforced stay in the Big Ten second Co. for several years. An intensive cam- division needed a stimulant. The en- paign in that department was under- tirely new coaching staff provided a .. taken and the treatment has seem- clean slate upon which to base a NT ingly produced results. Line blocking comeback. The new set-up served every ter is improved and Coach Crisler has as a shat in the arm. Chen is o 2 unearthed a corps of top-notch block- There was no ciance for favoritism. Theatre Bd ing backs. Lettermen and yearlings alike had 2nd The Varsity snap and precision had to prove themselves to the new men- been faltering-confidence lacking. The first remedy applied for this - ill consisted of a shift. Precise and rhythmic, the new cadence not only ARBOR NGS uA Au looks good on the field but lends N a hint of cockiness that is always dis- is sparklingly clear, a delightful drink, and it helps to m concerting to the opponent and helps a better meal. hold up the morale of the home team.AA Shoddy tackling also played its part ARBORSPRINGSWATERC PAN in the mediocrity of the Wolverine Phone 8270 gridders. "Too much arm, not enough I shoulder," said Crisler after watch- ing the aspirants on their first day out. Dummies and other apparatus y :::-, I was hauled out and the squad was . - - made shoulder-conscious as they went at their tackling drills. - - - Poor protection for pass receivers 1, 1. e Major Standings I1 AMERICAN LEAGUE New York ... Washington Boston ..... Detroit .... Chicago .... Athletics ... St. Louis ... W L .............14 7 .... . .. .15 8 .............13 8 .. .... . .....8 11 ..............7 11 ..............6 13 .............6 16 NAT New York. Chicago ... Pittsburgh. Cincinnati Boston . , . Brooklyn .. St. Louis Phillies Cleveland TIONAL LEAGUE W L ... . ......... 18 3 ..............13 9 ....... . ..11 9 ......11 11 . .. .. .. . . . . ' 7 9 ....... . ....9 13 ...............8 12 .... ........ .4 15 ... ...........13 8 Pet.- .667 .652 .619 .4,21 .389. .316 .273 Pct. .857 .591 '500 .438 .409 .400 .211 .619. Feller Follows IPath Of Grove As Mound Ace "One generation passeth away and another generation cometh" but pitching abideth forever. This strange baseball paradox is being proven this year by Robert."Old Man Mose" Grove and Robert "Young Boy Bob" Feller. There is a remarkable likeness be- tween careers of the two pitchers. Fifteen years ago, when Jack Dunn peddled Grove to Connie Mack's Ath- letics, Grove had a tremendous fast ball, a terrific temper and little con- trol of either. The sensation his fast ball created was comparable to the furore caused, by the young Cleve- land ace. Gradually, under the kindly pa- tience of Mack, the lefthanded 'one began to curb his temper. Instead of trying to blaze the fast one by, when in a tough spot, Lefty would mix them up, keep the hitter off balance with a, curve or a slow one. Bob Feller's short but meteoric ca- reer has been similar in many re- spects. In his first year in the big time, at the age of 17, the Iowa schoolboy struck out 16 Athletics and then, in a later appearance, equalled Dizzy Dean's record by fanning 17 Browns in one game. Now in his second full year, Feller, like Qrove, has learned to mix them. This early in the season, he has hurled a one-hitter, is leading the league in strikeouts and has lost 1 while winning 3. STROH'S CARLING'S FRIAR'S ALE --_At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 ..,.e w Announcement Mr. ULIAN FRANKEL style representative, will be in our store all day Saturday, the 14th, this week. A SPECIAL SHOWING of the new PALM BEACH for Spr-ing and Summer, giving you the opportunity to see the finest selection of Palm Beach clothing for all occasions, for Men, Young Men and Boys. A L - U --$1 ,1n la, HELEN DROPS ONE GAME LONDON, May 1l.-(P)-Helen Wills dropped only one game today as she defeated Miss H. R. E. Bullen, 6-1, 6-0, in the third round. WM. B. AMSTUTZ 607 Wolverine Bldg. Phone 8946 rthe A! Co, uawA Q1 ct In73 heMajor7 AMERICAN Boston 4, Chicago 2 Cleveland 1, New York 4 Detroit 4, Washington 1 St. Louis 9, Philadelphia 5 NATIONAL Brooklyn 7, Chicago 0 New York 5, St. Louis 3 Philadelphia-Pittsburgh, cold Boston-Cincinati, rain, cold I[ 1 i I J} y"~ /f"*r . . yV .r' ~t "-.4 T te , i q KEEP DELIGHTFULLY COOL in new 1938 i nh A T X \1D IC A I(NLJ t-NT nC T-LIQ Q I I 111 1 [