_I - S - . THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAC Wolverine Nine Trims Ypsi, 12-5; Linksmen Extend Streak ,;, _.. . Stoddard Stars Has In Relief Role; Allows One Hi -4 Perfect Day At Bat Golfers In Win Over Western State Teachers Captain Palmer Scores 73 To Gain Medal Honors In Wolverine Triumph (Continued from Page 1) Michigan Collects 15 Hits; Lisagor, Pink Garner Three Bingles Apiece (Continued rrom Page 1) Stoddard, although lacking in sheer speed, showed that he knows how to mix them up, and this ability along with his effective curve ball should make him a valuable man for the future. The Wolverine attack was led by Peckinpaugh who convincingly proved that his long slump is ended, as he clouted a sharp single in addition to his round-tripper. Pete Lisagor, had three singles to show for his after- noon's work, and Charley Pink beat out three bunts. Pink was forced to leave the game after being spiked in the eighth, but the injury did not prove serious and he will probably be back in the line- up today when the Wolverines travel to Kalamazoo to meet Western State Teachers. Veigel, Micpigan's mound starter, got by in the first two innings ex- hibiting a fair fast ball, but ran into immediate trouble in the third and was removed after five hits and a walk were good for five runs. The Wolverines got three back in their half, however, on hits by Pink, Sofiak, Peckinpaugh and Trosko, and knotted the score in the fourth on singles by Lisagor and Forest Eva- shevski, a sacrifice bunt by Stoddard and an error by pitcher Wescott. From then on it was a Michigan field day, the Wolverines counting three in the fifth, another in the sixth, and topping the festivities of in the eighth with Peckinpaugh's three- run homer. Coach Ray Fisher has nominated Jack Barry as the mound starter in today's Western State Teachers battle. Wolverine Bats Boom third point from Michigan's captain. Lynn Reiss was slow in starting against John Patchin, and after drop- ping a point to him on the initial nine holes, came back to take the final nine, and the round for two out of the three possible points. Reiss's 79 and Palmer's 73 went together to give the Wolverines all three points in their best ball match. Summaries Emery (76) defeated Bond (77), 2/-%; Loar (74) defeated Husbeek (83), 3-0; Palmer (73) defeated Pik- kaart (77), 2-1; Reiss (79) defeated Patchin (80), 2-1. Best ball: Emery and Loar de- feated Bond and Husbeck, 3-0; Palm- er and Reiss defeated Pikkaart and Patchin, 3-0. Siegel Makes PRESS PASSES Debut Tonight By Bun BENJAMIN jGrid Star Meets Hollis (EDITOR'S NOTE: The column this week is being written by junior applicants In First Pro Fight ] for the sports editorship next year. Today's article is contributed by Irving Gerson.) . A determined Don Siegel enters] Golf-Sportdom's Toughest . . . the ring tonight for the first time as a "prize" fighter when he steps GOLF, WHETHER it be amateur or professional, is the toughest competi- through the ropes at the Arena Gar-j tive major sport. dens in Detroit sometime around 10 We say this with full knowledge that in golf there is no physical contact. p.m. There is no crashing of brute strength as in football, nor is there the dashing huskyfroetddie Hlil of Canada t at full speed up and down the court as in basketball. The leaden-feeling legs also visions of his first purse and and gasping for breath of the trackman or the sharp pain of solid right perhaps future ones 100 times as uppercut that might land on the boxer's jaw have no counterpart in the large. golfing field. The golfer can play the entire round smoking a cigarette,, The bout is the semi-final on the chatting with friends or swapping jokes with his caddy. Most likely he will card of Promoter Sam Rosenthal who go heavy on the cigarettes, disregard the gallery and talk to his caddy only is making his second foray into the in regards to the game. For the competitive golfer is under a mental and promotional field and hopes, by vir- .ri.eture of the Michigan gridder's popu- nervous strain that is equaled in no other sport. larity, to draw his initial gate of im- It is known that a mental strain can prove far more tiring than portance. The opening fight is sched- physical contact. The mental strain is harder to control and the resulting uled for 8:30 p.m. and tickets in Ann nervousness proves fatal to many otherwise top-notch golfers. It is often Arbor are on sale at the Arcade Bar- remarked that the football player loses the tension with his first bump of ber Shop. the game. The golfer never receives this physical knock, but he must Even though he has definitely de- compete under tension that rivals, if not exceeds, that which athletes in termined to give pro boxing its full othe sprts xpeiene beoreplaybegns.'try, Siegel still has one ear open to other sports experience before play begins, his first love, football. He revealed Mental strain exists in any sport but the amount is much greater in yesterday that he has been invited to golf because, first, there is no outlet for the nervous energy stored up because play on an all-star college team the physical action is limited to the swing which by necessity must be kept at Providence, R.I., Sept. 14. He will in an extremely narrow groove; second, because more timing, coordination accept the offer and thus adds that and muscle control is needed; third, because more pressure is placed on the contest to his schedule which also individual; and fourth, because the amount of time needed to play is much includes the all-star game between greater. the college and professional teams at * * Chicago earlier the same month. In The Majors, NATIONAL LEAGUE New York..:...000 000 002 2 4 0 Boston..........124 000 00x 7 10 1 Castleman, Lohrman, Brown and Danning; Posedel and Lopez. Philadelphia .. .020 200 107 12 15 3 Brooklyn.......401 410 012 13 15 2 Henry, Passeau, Burkhart, Smith and Davis and Millies; Tamulis, Press- nell, Wyatt and Todd. Cincinatti ........000 000 100 1 6 0 Pittsburgh.......101 000 00x 2 9 1 Moore, Weaver and Lombardi; Se- well and Berres. N U.SHADES -another sparkling Staeb & Day idea- Pete Lisagor, senior second-sack- er, who led the Maize and Blue's 15-hit assault on Ypsi pitching by collecting three singles in as many trips to the plate. Pete also fielded his position flawlessly. Watson And Breidenbach Star For Michigan In Penn Relays Michigan 12 AB Pink, cf........... .5. Floersch, cf.........0 Sofiak, ss...........3 Smith, 2b...........0 Peckinpaugh, 3b ......4 Bergeson, 3b .........0 Gedeon, lb ...........2 Greenberg, lb ........1 Trosko, If .....5 Smick, rf ..........4 Ruehle, rf...........0 Lisagor, 2b ..........3 Steppon, 2b, ss........1 Evashevski, c........4 Veigel, p............0 Stoddard, p ..........3 Totals ..........35 Ii H O 'A 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 2 3 1 0 0 1 2 2 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 10 1 0 0 3 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 2 . 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 12 15 27 12 By DICK SIERK The Wolverine track team came back to Ann Arbor from the Penn Relays Sunday with one individual championship, Bill Watson's in the shot put, and memories of two bit- terly cold (for a track meet) days in Philadelphia. Watson was the outstanding per- former for the Michigan team. Be- sides his win in the shot put, Big Bill annexed seconds in the broad jump and discus throw. Bill finally broke into the win column against Francis Ryan when he out-tossed the Columbia shot-put- ter by two feet in setting a Relays record of 52 ft. 9 in. Bill last beat Ryan in 1937 and Friday's win was his second in eight meetings between the two. I According to Ken .Doherty, who made the trip in place of head coach Charley Hoyt, the Michigan team showed well in each of the relay events. The mile team, of course, was the standout, finishing second to Pitt. Incidentally, the time of the Wolverine foursome, as caught by three timers, according to Doherty, was 3:15.8 rather than the 3:16.4 reported by AP. Doherty also brought back the in- formation that Warren Breiden- back's 440-yard leg was around :47.5, and in turning in the best time of his career the speedy sophomore picked Diz Dean Is Shelled In Stratton Benefit CHICAGO, May --()-Monty Stratton won upwards of $25,000 and Dizzy Dean lost the ball game today. The Chicago White Sox, for whom Stratton pitched last year, knocked Dean out of the box and won an ex- hibition intra-city game, 4 to 1. All receipts from 25,594 spectators went to Stratton, whose gameness and courage after he lost his leg in a hunting accident last November in- spired the benefit game. The Sox belted Dean and his $185,- 000 arm out of the box after four in- nings. It was Dean's mound debut since the season began. Dizzy, tossing up only his famous "nothing" ball, was no mystery to the American Leaguers. After giving up only one hit in the first two innings, he lost control of the situation in the third and was touched for four hits and three runs, sewing up the ball game. John Whitehead went the route for the Sox, scattering the Cubs' 10 hits and pitching shutout ball for the first six innnigs. Vice-President Harry Grabiner of the White Sox said Stratton would realize "between $25,000 and $30,- 000" out of the game, but added the definite amount would not be known for two or three days. ~t up several yards on Pitt's Olympic champ, Long John Woodruff, who was far and away the meet's out- standing performer. The two-mile team also came in for its share of praise. With Ralph Schwarzkopf running a 1:56 half- mile after a fast mile less than an hour before, the Wolverines averaged slightly over that figure to finish third behind N.Y.U. and Indiana. Despite the cold weather in Phila- delphia the performances compared well with those of the weekend's rival Relay Carnival, the Drake Relays, run off under much more ideal weath- er conditions. A comparison of the 17 events shows each of the meets hav- ing top place in eight events with one tied. Mann Chooses Team For Trip l l l t Seven Next Natators Fall For To Leave England Michigan Normal 5 Walsh, ss ........ AB Newlands, cf.........5 Todt, 3b . ...........4 Drusbacky, 2b .... ...3 Borovich, lb.........4 Siera, rf .............4 Scripter, if ...........3 *Wieczynski ..........0 Anderson, c ......... .3 **Heffernan .........1 Wescott, p...........3 ***Cook............0 It 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 II 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 O 3 2 1 6 9 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 A 5 1 2 5 1 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 Totals ..........33 5 6 24 19 *Batted for Scripter in 9th. **Batted for Anderson in 9th. ***Batted for Wescott in 9th. Michiganr,..... 003 231 03x-12 Mich. Normna~l '.,..005 000 000-- 5 Errors: Gedeon, Walsh, Anderson, Wescott. Three base hits: Trosko, Borovich. Home run: Peckinpaugh. Stolen bases: Evashevski 2, Sofiak, Peckinpaugh, Gedeon, Trosko, Walsh. Sacrifices: Sofiak, Stoddard. Double plays: Sofiak to Gedeon: Walsh to Drusbacky to Borovich. Left on bases: Michigan 4; Michigan Normal 6. Bases on balls: Veigel 2, Stoddard 3; Wescott 4. Struck out: by Veigel 4; by Stoddard 3; Wescott 1. Hits: off Veigel 5 in 2 1/3 innings; of Stod dard 1 in 5 2/3 innings. Wild pitches: Veigel 1, Wescott 1. Winning pitcher: Stoddard. Umpires: Knode and Lin- say. Derby Favorites Now Number Two LOUISVILLE, May 1.-(AP)-Derby- town perked up its ears tonight as the vanguard of the annual crowds which head for this racing capital to see the Kentucky classic began to pour in from all sides. As hotel business picked up with early arrivals among the 80,000 to 90,000 expected to see Saturday's 65th renewal of the historic mile-and-a- quarter, most veteran horsemen pre- dicted the event shaped up as a two- horse affair, between William Wood- ward's big bay Johnstown, and Her- Seven Michigan swimmers have been selected to give a series of ex-' hibitions in England, it was an- nounced last night by swimming coach Matt Mann. Those chosen are Capt. Tom Hay- nie, '39, Captain-elect Hal Benham, '40, Ed Hutchens, '40, John Haigh, '40, Jim Welsh, '41, Bill Beebe, '41, and Tom Williams, '42. It is possible that two more men will be selected later, Mann said. The squad will sail from New York on the Queen Mary Sept. 6 after hav- ing participated as a team in the National Outdoor AAU's in Detroit Aug. 24, 25 and 26. They will be overseas six weeks and will give 20 exhibitions. "Only war can stop us," claimed Matt. The invitation, extended by the Hove Swimming Club of Sussex un- der the auspices of the Amateur Swimming Association of England, is the first ever made to any college or university to send a team to swim abroacd. Tlhe natators will be the first team representing the Un iver- sity to go abroad since Ray Fisher took his baseball team to Japan in 1932. The selected seven-man squad em- bodies all the component parts of a well-rounded swim team. Haynie, Hutchens, Welsh and Williams all swim the free style distances and the sprints, Haigh and Williams will do the breast stroking, Beebe, Williams and Haynie the back stroking and Benham will take care of the diving. The squad will not engage in regu- lar meets but "if there is a national championship floating around we'll be only too glad to do our share" said Mann. Baseball's Big Six HE AVERAGE golf tournament takes three days with thirty-six holes usually played on the final day. Some match play tournaments such as the National Amateur require a day of qualifying before the individual matches begin, and in some tournaments, play includes two matches daily for two or three days. The average round of golf takes about three hours which means that on some days the golfers must undergo the mental strain for at least six hours. And professional golfers, as well as many of the country's leading amateurs, play in one tournament immediately after an- other as they compete for money, medals and glory. Contrast to this, the boxer who fights for anywhere from a hundred seconds a la Louis to the 15 rounds maximum of three minutes each, about every two or three months. Or, the football player who competes in from say eight to eighteen games a year in each of which tabulations have shown there is about 11 minutes of action. And the player who is in the game every minute is by far the exception. Concentration and coordination in athletics go hand in hand, for the former is necessary in order to attain the latter. In golf, a greater degree of coordination is necessary than in any other sport, from which it follows, of couse, that more concentration is necessary in golf. And continued concen- tration is, in itself, a tiresome strain as any student will testify. Although, his physical exercise has been pratically nil, the student will be exhausted after a hard day of studying. * * * ON THE coordination side, the basketball player can flick the ball through ' the hoop with a one-hand push shot, the tennis player can return a shot with a movement of the feet and a stroke of the arm, the erstwhile Davey O'Brien can throw a perfect forward pass with the proper arm action co- ordinated with the wrist movement, and even the more complicated motion of the pitcher does not approach the body coordination necessary to hit a golf ball consistently and accurately. The golfer must control and time the movements of both of his hands, both of his wrists, both of his shoulders, both of his hips, both of his knees and both of his feet, while shifting his weight from first his left foot to his right foot and then back to his left foot at the same time, hold his head motionless. Is muscle coordination needed? Should any one of these movements get out of line, should some part of his body depart from the necessary groove, the shot is likely to go astray. It is because of this that, more so in golf than in the other sports, there is so much variation in the play of the participants from day to day and even from shot to shot. Unlike most of the other forms of athletic competition, the entire action in golf is individualistic. Only one of the competitors is in action at a particu- lar moment and then all the attention and the resultant pressure falls on that person. This increased pressure as well as the necessity for concentra- tion is recognized by all, in that absolute quiet is granted when a golfer to shooting. Similar pressure is evident in basketball when a player shoots a foul, but the cager may average two or three fouls a game while the golfer mkes upwards of 70 shots a round. The baseball pitcher can throw a bad ball but the batter may swing and pop to the infield, the tennis player can hit a mediocre shot and win the point by his opponent's hitting out of bounds, but when the competitive golfer misses a shot, he is immediately penalized because old man par, his opponent, never varies and never offsets the player's errors. This brings us to the final point. In all athletics, except golf, the competitors meet strong as well as weak opponents. If the football, tennis or baseball teams have several hard games in a row, a comparative breather usually precedes, or follows, the tough opponents.' Perhaps, one of the strong teams has an off day, then opposition may be easy. But the golfer is always playing against par, even in match play when the golfers medal score is poor, his reputation will suffer even if he does beat his opponent. The best match players unanimously advocate playing against par, not your opponent when in a match. Par is an opponent that is made to be difficult, which never has an off day and never gets easier. Yes, without mentioning the five or ten miles walked, golf is the tough- est competitive major sport. --B - COLLSGE BASEBALL Notre Dame 12; Indiana 7. Wisconsin 14; Illinois State Norm. 2. -,N Quality ..,,.. First It's fun to paint up and fix up wien you are using the best of materials. In Boydell Paints we are offering you known qual- ity-second to none. Use them on your next job of decorating and be enthused with the results. SCHLENKER HARDWARE CO.' "Since 1886" 213-215 W. Liberty Ph. 2-3265 w NU-SHADES are the richest, softest, most pleasing colors imaginable . . . Azure blue, palm green and platinum in a lustrous broadcloth - collar attached. They provide a tiffany setting for your favorite ties. $2.00'and $2.50 THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN $wlaeb &1)inu - We'N sw , m0 son M ermw Drik More Milk for " Year-Round Health Milk Dealiers of Ann Arbor pg4 I For ... 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Ask your neighbor's opinion of Fuller quality and service. 6. A free brush given on each call makes Fuller men welcome in millions of homes. Anointment system. May4th 14th May 14th Apostoli Decisions Seelig CLEVELAND, May 1.-(IP)-Fred Apostoli, of San Francisco, recog- nized as world's middleweight box- ing champion in New York and Cali- fornia, won a close 10-round decision over Eric Seelig, of New York, here MOTHER"DAY THE ONE GIFT that really expresses your affection- arrange for your Mother's Day photograph toaay! I i I I