PACE THIE SU!NDIAY.MAY 14, 1839 THlE MICT:ITC AN DAILY p WLTYLal l[al as L 11 _ + .. IN THIS CORNER By Mel Fineberg In The RingĀ®.-. Don Siegel makes his second pro- fessional appearance at the boxing plate next Friday on the Bob Pas- tor-Roscoe Toles card at Arena Gar- dens. The rangy Michigan tackle will go to bat against a 240-pound Saginaw. slugger surnamed Slachta, Christian name unknown and second name probably misspelled by the linotyper. , It is claimed (by Slachta) that he is the proud possessor of a left hook but this remanis to be seen. In spite of the deprecatory re- marks passed by some of the met- ropolitan newspapermen about Siegel's inexperience Vern Lar- son has high hopes for the pro- fessional future of his protege. According to Larson, "Siegiel is not yet a finished fighter; he's still awkward and inexperienced. But he's got the stuff. I believe that he'll go places fast. With- in one year he's going to be fighting for $1,000 a match." It sounds possible. With the pau- city of material in the heavyweight ranks today, a man with Siegel's natural abilities could go far. When Two-Ton Tony Galento, who is bet- ter able to mangle the English lan- guage than any boxing opponent of calibre, is named the outstanding challenger in the ranks they certain- ly make no mistake when they call it "ranks." * * * Word comes over the wire that the "greatest horse in years," Johnstown, was beaten in the Preakness. Now we don't claim to know too much about the inside of horse racing but This Corner wants to state right now that we were probably the only ones in the country with courage to come right out in the open and pick Chal- ledon who won today. We were so good that we called the winner over a week ago. Of course, modesty compels us to admit that we had Challedon picked for the Kentucky Derby which was run a week ago. Chal- ledon ran second to Johnstown at Churchill Downs, but it does show that we had the right idea, and it was a week early at that. We sent our Derby betting tick- ets to the Preakness by air mail in hopes they'll pay us for our faith. It seems only fair that they should reward such foresight. True Loyalty.. .. We have just received concrete evi- dence that there is still some faith in what Sec Terry terms "a world gone barbaric." It was just after the De- troit Tigers had lost their tenth game in eleven starts. One of The Daily cronies turned to a rabid Tiger rooter and crowed triumphantly, "Well, what do you think of your Detroit team now? I think they smell." The fugitive from a box score mournfully, yet loyally, replied, "Aw, they ain't so bad. They're just misunderstood." The combination of the two leads us to think of the situation at Pitts- burgh and the resignation of Dr. Jock Sutherland who turned out the na- tion's top teams while coaching there. And while we're at this point, we might as well make a prediction as to the fate of the good Dr. Suther- land. He will stay out of football for a year. He will confine himself to writing for magazines and broad- casting. He will do this because there is no coaching opening at a large school. Then, after a year of inactiv- ity, he will become head coach at The University of Southern California where the opposition to Howard Jones will demand the change. The anti-Jones faction has been quieted by the Trojan vic- tory over Notre Dame last year, but it may pop up with a poor season next year and the change might come. * * * Basebal Hoytmen Score One-Sided Win Over Buckeyes Powerhouse Track Team Shatters Four Records In 1021/2-28 /2 Victory (Continued from Page 1) Track Stackhouse Is New Yearling Track Coach (Continued from Page 1) Teams Michigan Nine Trims Indiana By 11-1 Score Irimn Big Ten t "_ Opponents Newsom Joins Tigers In Trade With Browns Yellows Trounce Blues, 31-26, In Intra-Squad Gridiron Battle ter than the existing Conference mark. Watson also won the broad jump with 24, feet nine and one-fourth inches. Ohio's Bob Lewis nipped Al Smith in the 220 to atone for his defeat by Smith in the 100 earlier in the after- noon. Sophomore Ed Barrett led the first of four Michigan sweeps, as he, Karl Wisner, and Jack Dobson staged a surprise defeat of the Buck ace. Jim Whittaker in the first event of the day, the mile. Elmer Gedeon, Stan Kelley, and John Kutsche gave another sweep in the high hurdles with Gedeon win- ning in 14.3 to tie the meet record. Kelley, Jeff Hall, and Bob Barnard finished one-two-three in the low hurdles, as Kelley won with 23.7. Howard Ell and Durwood Cooper- rider outflung Michigan's Perry Kim- erer in the javelin and Buckeye Buchanan tied in the pole vault with Dave Cushing and August Fabyan. Bob Hook and Tom Lawton proved capable substitutes for Watson, fin- ishing one-two in the shot put, while the crippled high jumpers, Wes Allen and Don Canham, tied for first in their event. Tommy Jester outran Ohio's Les Eisenhart to cop the 880 for Michigan, with Dye Hogan com- ing in third. TRACK SUMMARIES One mile run; Won by Barrett (M); second, Wisner (M); third, Dobson (M). Time-4:22.7 seconds. 440-yard run: Won by Breiden- bach (M) ; second, Faulkner (M) ; third, Sulzman (O). Time-47.2. (New Ferry Field and meet record). 100-yard dash: Won by Smith (M) ; second, Lewis (O); third, Carl Culver (M). Time-9.8. Shot put: Won by Hook (M); sec- ond, Lawton (M) ; third, Simmons (O). Distance-47 ft., 5% in. 120-yard high hurdles: Won by Gedeon (M) ; second, Kelley (M) ; third, Kutsche (M). Time-14.3 sec- onds. (Equals dual meet record). 880-yard run: Won by Jester (M) ; second, Eisenhart (0); third, Hogan (M). Time-1:54.7. 220-yard dash: Won by Lewis (O); second, Smith (M); third, C. Culver (M). Time-:21.4. Two-mile run: Won by Schwartz- kopf (M); second, Whittaker (0); third, Heyl (M). Time-9:17.3 (New Ferry Field and meet record). 220-yard low hurdles: Won by Kelley (M); second, hall (M); third Barnard (M). Time-23.7. Pole vault: Won by Buchanan (0) Cushing (M) and Fabyan (M) tied for first. Height-12 ft., 6 in. High jump: Won by Allen (M) and Canham (M) tied for first; Todd (O) and King (M) tied for third. Height: 5 ft. 9 1/8 in. Javelin throw: Won by Ell (0); second, Cooperrider (0); third, Kim erer (M). Distance-180 ft. 8 /14 in Discus throw: Won by Watson (M); second, Hook (M); third, Rebb (O) Distance 161 ft., 1 3/4 in. (New Ferr3 Field and meet record). Broad Jump: Won by Watson (M); second C. Culver M) ; third, F Culver (1M). Distance: 24 ft., 9 1/4 in. Mile relay: Won by Michigan (Leut- ritz,= Faulkner, Dalyeat, Breiden- bach). Time-3:13.9. (New Ferr3 Field and meet record). high school, and have won the Valley regional meet for six straight years. His teams have also annexed the state Class A high school title two years,. in 1935 and in 1938.- His successes at Saginaw have not been confined to track, for his foot-; ball team won the Saginaw Valley title in 1937 and twice finished sec- ond, while his 1938 basketball team tied for the Valley title and reached the semi-final round of the state Class A tournament. Stackhouse, who is 33 years old, is a graduate of Central State Teachers College and coached at three high schools before coming to Saginaw. His previous coaching experience was gained at Cadillac, Sharon, O., and Smithtown High, Long Island, N.Y. The best known of the new coach's products is Bill Watson, who only yesterday erased another all-time Michigan record in the discus with a 161 ft. 1 in. effort, and won the broad jump. Ralph Schwarzkopf created a new Ferry Field record in the two-mile run; Jack Leutritz con- tributed a fast first leg to the one- mile relay team's great, 3:13.9 record; and Sherm Olmsted, the fourth of the Stackhouse products, ran in the high hurdles rack. Psi 1U Retains I Glf Title Law Club And Wolverines Cop Division Crowns Psi Upsilon, Law Club, and the Wolverines won championships in their respective divisions yesterday in the third annual All-Campus Intra- mural golf tournament in which a field of 200 linksmen participated. Psi U's big four of Palmer (78), Keller (80), McElfrish (82), and Evans (86) gave their team a low score of 326 to retain the fraternity championship which they won last year. Beta Theta Pi; with 339, took second place, one stroke ahead of the third-place Phi Delta Theta team. The championship in the profes- sional fraternity division was won by Law Club for the second year in suc- cession. A pair of 79's by Dardas and Munson, an 89 by Wills and a 94 by Meachum netted the Lawyers an aggregate low of 341. Nu Sigma Nu and Phi Chi, two medical fraternities, captured second and third places, respectively. ,In the Independent division, the Wolverine quartet recorded a low total of 341 to walk off with the title. Their individual cards were: Loud, 80; Klonoski and Walbridge, 86; and i Thorner, 89. The Phys Eds nosed out the Beeler Boys for the runnerup spot with a 350 over the latter's 351. John Kleene of Alpha Delta Phi turned in a card of 77 for the lowest card of the tourney. Barry Keeps Seven Hits Scattered As Gedeon, Beebe Hit Home Runsz (Continued from Page 1)c Cromer's single and an infield out after Fisher had inserted the second string infield. Charley Pink, the Michigan lead-3 off man, was up five times in the first six innings, beat out two bunts,1 begged two passes and finally ground-, ed out to the pitcher. Ernie Andres fell asleep in the fifth inning and let Beebe steal third base. Andres was playing in on the grass for an expected Pink bunt and forgot to cover when the Michigan catcher saw the opening and came down un- molested. The game opened in front of empty stands since the track meet was still in progress, played four innings as a full house watched and then finished in semi-privacy as the spectators em- barked en masse for the spring foot- ball game. Turning The Tables Michigan-11 AB R H 0 A Pink, cf.............332 1 0 Trosko, If ...........3 2 2 3 0 Peckinpaugh 3b ......4 1 1 3 3 Gedeon, 1b ...........4 1 2 4 1 Greenberg, lb.......0 0 0 0 0 Steppon, ss ..........5 0 0 5 2 Smick, rf ............4 1 1 2 0 Ruehle, rf ............1 0 0 0 0 Lisagor, 2b ...........4 1 1 2 3 Smith, 2b ...........1 0 0 1 1 Beebe, c .............3 2 3 5 0 Evashevski, c ........1 0 0 0 0 Barry, p ..............4 0 1 1 1 Totals ...........36 11 13 27 11 ST. LOUIS, May 13.---(A One of the biggest baseball trades of recent years, was completed here tonight be- tween the Detroit Tigers and the St. Louis Browns. The deal, announced by General Manager Jack Zeller of the Tigers, centered around Louis (Buck) New- som, big right-handed St. Louis pit- cher whom the Bengals have been after for some time. In addition to Newsom, Detroit also gets outfielder Roy Bell, infielder Ralph Kress and pitcher James Walkup. In exchange the Tigers gave the following players: pitchers Ver- non Kennedy, Roxie Lawson, George Gill and Bob Harris; outfielder Ches- ter Laabs and infielder Mark Christ- man. Michig'an Golf Squad Victors Over Wildcats Perpich Of Northwestern Turns In Lowest Score; Palmer Second In Field EVANSTON, Ill., May 13.-(Special to The Daily)-Balance and ability to come through in the pinches gave Michigan's high-riding golf team a 13%/2 to 10%/2 victory over Northwes- tern today. Led by Capt. Bob Palmer, who carded 35-37 for 72, second best total of the day, the Wolverines had little difficulty in handing the Wildcats their second defeat of the .season. Northwestern's Frank Perpich blasted out a sub-par 36-35-71 total for the best showing of the day, but even that wasn't enough to keep his team from losing its second in six matches. Michigan's Jack Emery had the third best total of the day with 38- 35-73. The Summaries: Doubles: Emery and Loar, (M) de- feated Richardson and Bedrosian, I (N) 22 to '/2; Perpich and Bland, (N) defeated Tusing and Palmer, (M) 3 to 0. Singles: Reiss, (M), defeated San- non, (N), 2 to 1; Emory, (M), de- feated Richardson, (N), 2/2 to 1/2; - Perpich, Northwestern, defeated Loar (M), 2 to 1; Bland, (N), defeated Tu- * sing, (M), 2 to 1; Palmer, (M), de- feated Sannon, (N), 3 to 0; and Bed- , rosian, Northwestern, tied Reiss, (M) i. 11% t0 1%.2 Squad Displays Powerfull Offense, Weak Defense In Free Scoring Game (Continued from Page 1) "black plague" ineligibility take away. Bob Westfall smashed over from the one yard line to start the scoring in the first 'period after Norm Call had carried it there on a 10-yard pass from David Strong. A few min- utes later Call again scored for the Yellows when he ran 40 yards for a touchdown after intercepting a Blue pass. Strong made the score 13-0 when he kicked the extra point. Opening the second stanza the Blues scored twice and made the trys for the extra points to take a 14-13 lead at half time. A pass from Kromer to Czak scored the third straight touchdown for the Blues in the third, and they ended their scoring for the afternoon when Strong's punt was blocked by Czak and recovered by freshman tackle George Oostroot in the end zone. Repeating Czak's performance, Frutig blocked Luther's attempted punt on his goal line and Harlin Fraumann, freshman end of the Yel- lows, recovered to close the third period scoring. The Yellows picked up' where they left off starting the final frame, and after an exchange of punts steam- rollered 40 yards to score again when Westf all plunged over from the one yard line. Strong ended an 80-yard parade by plunging over from the one yard line to close the scoring and put his team in the lead. THE LINE-UPS: Blues Pos. Yellows Rogers LE Frutig Bill Smith LT Kelto Fritz (Capt.) LG Melzo Ingalls C Kodros (Capt.) Laine RG Butler Oostroot RT Wistert Czak RE Fraumann Megregian Q Kohl Kromer LH Strong Dave Nelson RH Call Christy F Westfall Substitutions, Blues, Ends: Nielsen, Purcell. Tackles, Smith, Labadie, Zielinjski. Center, Ford. Guards, Morrow, Galles, Thomas. Backs, Luther, Zimmerman, Banoski, Selt- zer, Schmeling, Funk, Weber. Substitutions, Yellows: Ends, Bos- za, Hamaker, Owens. Tackles, Se- merad, Flora, Vollmer. Guards, Cun- ningham, Denise, Paddy. Center, Wilson. Backs, P. Nelson, Gannatele, Grissen, Wickter, Roberts, Neumann. Caps, Gowns & Hoods For FACULTY and GRADUATES Complete Rental and Sales Service Call and inspect the nation- ally advertised line of The C. E. Ward Company, New London, Ohio. All rental items thoroughly sterilized before each time used, complete satisfaction guaranteed. Get our Rental~ Rates and Selling Prices. VAN BOVEN, Inc. Phone 8911 Nickels Arcade t Distinction + Beauty SService Indiana-1 AB Corriden, rf ..........4 Kosman ss.........4 Gwin, cf............3 Cromer, lb, p .........4 Andres, 3b..........4 Danielson, 2b .........4 Dro, If, lb..........4 Stoshitz, c ...........3 Hundley, p .........1 Cox, p............... l Francis, lf ...........1 R 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H 2 0 0 2+" 0 1 0 0 1 Q 1 O 1 1 2 8 0 0 7 4 0 0 1 A 0 2 0 2 2 4 0 0 2 0 I for Spring F5,: I j i; i i .. .. 7, rm It's the thing ! Totals ..........33 1 7 24 13 Michigan ........025 220 00x-11 Indiana ..........000 000 001- 1 Errors: Greenberg, Smith, Andres, Kosman. Two base hit: Danielson Home runs: Beebe, Gedeon. Stolen bases: Beebe 2, Peckinpaugh, Lisagor Sacrifices: Trosko, Peckinpaugh. Double plays: Peckinpaugh to Lisa- gor to Gedeon 2; Lisagor to Gedeon tc Peckinpaugh. Left on bases: Michigan 9, Indiana 7. Bases on balls: off Barry 1; off Hundley 3; off Cox 1. Hits: off Hund- ley 6 in 3 innings; off Cox 4 in 2 iiiings; off Cromer 3 in 3 innings. Hit by pitcher: by Barry (Stoshitch) Passed balls: Stoshitz 2. Wild pitch: Hundley. Balk: Cox. Losing pitcher: Hundley. Umpires: Knode and Linsay. I 1 0 a 'f 2 . d II GOOD FOOD . . .at the... yIeU-O-llue Cafe Daily Lunches.. . 30c Daily Dinners . . . 35c ______ Special T-BONE STEAK or 1/4 CHICKEN 50 3141/2 South State Street Across from Kresge's VENETIAN BLINDS MODERNIZE YOUR HOME OR FRATERNITY HOUSE. FOX TENT & AWNING CO. 642 SOUTH MAIN / PHONE 2-4407 11 i li I I TOWARD AN 1 AMERICAN CULTURE Eddie Tolan, double sprint cham- pion in the 1932 Olympics, came back to the old stamping grounds to watch the track meet yesterday. The Michi- gan graduate, who is state director of the Negro NYA, may leave soon for a trip to the other half of the world. * * * Fielding H. Yost, who is recovered from his recent illness, claimes he "never enjoyed a race as much as he did the relay race yesterday." "Those boys (Leutritz, Faulkner, Balyeat and Briednenbach) were poetry in mo- tion," he asserts. ELLIOTT MARANISS .I _ "~~~~ Editorial Director of The Daily SENIORS Get your COMMENCEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS ELLIOTT MARANISS, Editorial Director of The Daily, will contribute a series of articles, beginning Tuesday, dealing with the work of -ba pderl Arts Proicts. in the Nation and II. . .1 I