;MAY26, 1939 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE tHREE Smiek Faces Purdue Today; Weirmen Meet Ohio Wesleyan h ~1i IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBFRG Third Position STo Be Decided Number Two Slugger In Vital Series ...... rw- Ball Player's Choice... In spite of the heavy pressure that is being brought to bear on Elmer Gedeon, by coaches throughout the Conference, he will not compete in the Big Ten-Pacific Conference meet June 21 in Berkeley, Cal. The Western Conference high hurdle champion who would rather be known as a base- ball player, is set on playing profes- sional baseball and unless something unforeseen happens, will start as soon as school is over. Gedeon has had offers from sev- eral teams but has not yet signed with any. It is rumored that he will start to play in the Eastern League but that if he goes to the Coast for the track meet, the offers may be withdrawn. Gedeon, already in his early twenties, has delayed his pro- fessional launching long enough. Further delay may mean it may never start. As Fred Hunter, a scout for the Boston Red Sox, told us, it us- ually takes five or six years for a play- er to climb to the majors. If Gedeon has to wait that long, he'll be nearing the 30-year mark and the sooner he finds out whether or not he has the stuff, the better off his future will be. This summer should tell the tale of Elmer's diamond future. If anybody asked us for our un- schooled opinion, we'd say that Ged- eon appears to possess the necessary requisites. To say that he is a big and fast is superfluous, but he also has brains and the desire to play. He has the power and the natural co- ordination to become a strong hitter. These natural abilities will suffice Until others need be mentioned. Now that Bill Watson has consent- ed to accompany the Big Ten team to the coast, ostensibly because he se- cured Joe Louis' permission, it ap- pears that the Western Conference has a chance. After taking a pair of consecutive drubbings, a third might well have meant a secession from the competition by this Con- ference.uThe meet would not have drawn much more than flies, and in spite of the protestations of the Big Ten coaches who claim that the com- petition is fine for the men, it's got' to be paid for. The meet flopped, financially, in Chicago last year. That was partly due to the fact that it was held at twilight, in the rain and had been postponed. But the drawing power of what should be a natural has been consid- erably diminished by the fact that the Michigan seniors have been more anxious to go to work than to keep on running. That's why it's a good thing for the Big Ten that Rox- borough and Louis persuaded Watson to. compete. They've got a fighting chance now and the meet has a chance to survive. On the basis of comparative times and distances this league has a good chance-that is, on a basis of first places. Whether or not the Confer- ence has the power to match the mass strength of the Westerners is another story. Fifty, Fifty. . Walter Mehl of Wisconsin won the Big Ten mile title in 4:14.3 while Lou Zamperini of U.S.C. won in 4:16.3. Both can run faster but the Coast star has at least a two second edge. Warren Breidenbach of Michigan captured the 440 on a slow track in 47.6 while Irv Miller of U.SC. was the winner in 47,2. A close race here but the Michigan sophomore de- serves the edge. The Big Ten appears stronger in this event. In the 100, the Coast excels. Clyde Jeffrey of Stanford won in 9.6 while Myron Piker of N.W. was Western Conference champion in 9.9. If Gedeon would run th high Major League Standings_ hurdles, the Big Ten would win. He! won, on a slow track, in 14.4 and had run 14.2. Humphrey of U.S.C. won in 14.6 but has run 14.3. Ed Smith, runner-up from Wisconsin, and Steve Gutting of Purdue, will fight it out with Hawkins of Stanford. Surprise Big Ten winner in the half mile was Ed Buxton of Wisconsin inl 1:53.9 while Washington State's Dale won in 1:54.6. Zamperini, who has run in the low 1:53's, ran third, and his teammate Reading, who has beat- en him, didn't place.; Watson was Big Ten shot put win- ner with a throw of 52 ft. 6 5/8 in., has bettered 54ft. Herb Michael of California won wtih 52 ft. 41/2 in. The Coast's first four, all threw over 50 ft. and all four were better than the Big Ten's second man, Archie Harris of Indiana. Roger Poorman" of Purdue threw the javelin 193 ft. 31/4 in. but will be badly outclassed in this meet. Boyd Brown of Washington State threw 224 ft. 1% in. with Bob Peoples of Southern Cal., less than two inches behind. Their first five all threw far- ther than Poorman. Bob Lewis of Ohio ran 21 seconds to win the 220 with Al Smith of Michigan second. Jeffrey won in the same time. Watson's winning discus heave was 160 ft. 10% in. Stanford's Pete Zagar won with 157 ft. 4 in. with Trojan Wrotnowski four inches be- hind. Zagar is National A.A.U. cham- pion and has thrown 161 ft. 10 inches this year. Ralph Schwarzkopf won the two- mile in 9:25.3 but has run over 15 seconds faster. Dixie Garner of Wash- ington State was the winner,-in 9:22.1 but Zamperini who went to the Olym- pics in the distance, was not ehtered. 23.4 was Ray Cochrane's winning time in the low hurdles while red- headed Earl Vickery of Southern Cal. won in X3.3. Vickery has run 22.7, one-tenth of a second off Jesse Ow- ens' world record.- Michigan's winning relay time was 3:14.7; Southern Cal's was 3:15.2. Bob Diefenthaler of Illinois won the high jump with a leap of 6 ft. 6 in. Five men tied on the coast at 6 ft. 2 in. Watson won the broad jump with 25 ft. 5% in. Guy Manuel of Cali- fornia won with 24 ft. 2 in. Bob Cassels of Chicago set a Big Ten mark of 14 ft. 2/4 in. in the pole vault while Milt Padway, Wisconsin's runner-up, has gone over 14 feet. Clean Sweep Is Necessary To Displace Riveters; Barry To Hurl Closer Relieved of the pressure that ac- companied their quest for the Big Ten baseball crown, the Wolverines open a two-game consolation series for third place with Purdue at Lafayette, Ind., this afternoon. The Boilermakers, still clinging to a faint mathematical ray of hope for a share of the coveted Conference title, are the present occupants of third place. The Riveters' record of five victories and three defeats against Michigan's six wins and four losses makes it necessary for the Var- sity to sweep the series in order to wind up the season ahead of Purdue, since the series will mark the Big Ten diamond finale for both teams. fi.mick Hurls Opener As usual, Coach Ray Fisher will bank on Danny Smick and Jack Barry to take the mound in that order to gain the Wolverines a creditable spot in the final Conference stand- ings. Mike Sofiak, "holler guy" ofthe Varsity infield, may be kept out of the lineup due to a reccurence of the sore shoulder that benched him earlier in the season. Should Sofiak's throwing arm again prove bother- some, Bill Steppon will once more fill in for Mike. Lineup Unchanged The rest of the lineup will remain the same. Leo Beebe will handle the pitchers' slants, Elmer Gedeon will be at first base, Pete Lisagor ab. sec- ond, Capt. Walt Peckinpaugh at third, Freddie Trosko in ?eft field, Charlie Pink in center, and Bill Step- pon or Forest Evashevski in right. Coach Dutch Fehring of the Boil- ermakers has Bob Baily and Dick Wardo, his two aces, lined up to hurl the Michigan series. Baily, the sophomore sensation who pitched Purdue to four straight Conference ictories before dropping a six-hit- ter to Illinois by the score of 1-0, last Friday, is regarded as one of the top- notch pitchers in the Conference and should prove troublesome for the Wolverines. Loring Day of U.S.C. won with 14 feet but has gone half a foot higher. George Varoff of Oregon, who was second, was former world's record holder at 14 ft. 71/2 in. Pete Lisagor, veteran varsity second baseman, is at present bat- ting .333. Now in his third year as regular keystone guardian, Lisa- gor has driven out 26 safeties in 78 times at bat to be second only to Charlie Pink in the averages. Theta Chi Wins Softball Crown From Clhi Phi Shroth Holds Opposition To. Only Five Safeties As Mates Pound Ball By WOODY BLOCH Combining a hard hitting attack with a five-hit pitching performance by Dick Shroth, Theta Chi whipped Chi Phi yesterday at Wines field 11-6 to win the fraternity first place soft- ball championship. Shroth allowed but one earned run as his mates made five errors to help the Chi Phi batsmen around the bases. Only in the second and the sixth inning was. he in trouble by virtue of several misplays. Big First Inning Bob Barber started a five run rally for Theta Chi in the firt inning by wading into Randall Brown's first pitch for a triple. Successive singles by Dick Shroth, Vincent Dunn and. Paul Nielson, combined with a wild pitch, scored four runs. Chuck Dill- man singled first baseman Davis home to end the scoring in a disas- trous opening inning for Chi Phi. Chi Phi garnered two unearned runs in the second as Ben Durfee walked and scored when Colvin Gib- son dropped Robert Morse's fly in short center field. Morse then raced home as outfielder Lorezzen hit a long drive to center. In the third inning, Charley Schmeling, Chi Phi, got a life on an error, stole second and third, then raced home as Buck Antle who walked was called out for taking a lead. Nielson Homers Theta Chi, held scoreless for three innings, added three more runs in the fifth and sixth. Paul Nielson wal- loped a home run with two on in the fifth to drive in Whitey Frauman and Vincent Dunn who had singled. Lew Slater drove a hit to left and scored on Bill Keas' safe blow to short right field in the sixth. Robert Barber then followed Keas across the,,plate as his long 'fly in deep cen- ter field was dropped. In the sixth inning Chi Phi pushed over two more runs on three succes- sive errors by Theta Chi. Charles Schmeling hit a home run to right field in the last inning to score Chi Phi's only earned ruil. Randall Brown, in defeat, struck out nine Theta Chi men with a nice change of pace, and Charles McHugh played a bang up game at shortstop to star for the losers. Netters Engage Pair Of Teams This Weekend Four Seniors Make Their Final Home Appearance; Team Ends Dual Season The most successful dual season in many years will wind up this after- noon and tomorrow afternoon for the Michigan Varsity netmen when they meet the Ohio Wesleyan and Du- quesne teams at Palmer Field. The match this afternoon will begin at 3:00 p.m., while tomorrow's against Duquesne will get under way at 2:30 p.m. These final pre-Conference dual matches will also mark the last home appearance of four seniors, Capt. Don Percival, John Kidwell, Steve Woolsey and Ed Morris. Percival, Kidwell Mainstays Percival and Kidwell have been mainstays of the Wolverine squad in the singles matches for the past two years, with Percival alternating be- tween one and two spot this year, and Kidwell playing three regularly. Woolsey and Morris, however, have been used mainly as doubles players this year, with Steve playing number three with junior Sam Durst, and Ed pairing with Percival in first spot. Whenever either one worked in the singles, it was usually in five or six spot. Woolsey's most valuable win in the singles, was this past Wednesday when he downed Gibbs of Michigan State, 9-7, 6-8, 6-2. Weirmen Have Won 14 Until today, the Weirmen have assembled a record of 14 wins and four losses. The defeats have been spread over the season, with no two coming in succession. Tomorow's match against Duquesne will mark the second meeting of the year for the two teams, with the Wolverines winning the first, 9-0. The match was played at the end of the Weir- men's spring trip, and the Pittsburgh boys have improved a great deal since then. Following tomorrow's match, Coach Leroy Weir will pick his squad which he will take with him to Chicago for the annual Western Conference meet. Armstrong Retains Title In Bout With British Ace LONDON, May 25.-GP)-Henry Armstrong, the "Little Brown Bomb- er" from Los Angeles, successfully de- fended his world welterweight cham- pionship tonight by outpointing Er- nie Roderick, the British titlist, in 15 rounds at Harringay Stadium. Arm- strong weighed 135; Roderick 145%. Off to a slow start, Hurricane Hank finally caught up with the tall slim Briton and from the seventh round on belted him all around the ring to win going away. Pitchers Shine As Reds And Cardinals Continue Battle For First Place BOSTON, May 25. -(A')- Cleve- land's Bob Feller turned in a one-hit, 11-0, pitching triumph over the Bos- ton Red Sox today. Only Bobby Doerr'sclean singlekto right field in the second inning kept the youthful strikeout king from the no-hit hall of fame. It was the second time in 13 months that a lonely blow deprived Feller of no-hit distinction. In Feller's first appearance last season, Billy Sulli- van of the St. Louis Browns beat out a sixth-inning bunt for the only enemy hit. The Iowa farm boy struck out ten batters. Although he walked five, all the passes came with two out. It gave Feller his seventh win of the sea- son and was the first time the 20- year-old speedball artist ever beat the Red Sox in their own park. Number 200 For Red NEW YORK, May 25. -(P)- The New York Yankees made use of their specialty, one big inning, to down the Detroit Tigers 5 to 2 today al- though held to four hits by Archie McKain and Schoolboy Rowe. It was the seventh victory without defeat this season for Big Red Ruff- ing, dean of the Yankee pitching corps, and his 200th in 15 years of American League service. His mates obtained it for him by filling the bases in the seventh on two walks and an error and then cleaning them. Ruffing sacrificed one score across, Frank Crosetti singled another home and Rob Rolfe tripled for two more. Lombardi Leads Reds CHICAGO, May 25. -(,P)- The rampant Cincinnati Reds ran their string of victories to ten today with a 6 to 1 conquest of the New York Giants on the three-hit pitching of Lloyd (WhiteY) Moore and Gene Thompson. With Ernie Lombardi getting his seventh homer of the season in the fourth inning and driving in another run in the sixth on one of his two singles, Cincinnati's cause was never in doubt. Cards Stop Bees, 7-1 ST. LOUIS, May 25. -(W)- The league-leading St. Louis Cardinals, behind the effective hurling of Bob Weiland and Bob Bowman, won their seventh straight game today, defeat- ing the Boston Bees, 7 to I, to'keep just a jump ahead of the Cincinnati Reds. Despite his sore arm, Weiland.al- lowed but five hits in the 6 2/3 in- nings he pitched to get credit for the victory, and Bowman permitted but one blow the remainder of the game. H. W. CLARK English Boot and Shoe Maker * Our new repair department, the best in the city. Prices are right. 438 South State and Factory on South Forest Avenue. Bob Feller Pitches One-Hitter; Ruff ing Gains Seventh Win,5-2 Chicago Powerhouse Favored To Retain Big Ten Net Crown TOMORROW! THE' B I BLE. TO BELIEVE IT --OR NOT? DR. W. M. SMITH 7:45 P.M. - SAT., MAY 27 NORTH LOUNGE -UNION II Our mfen are smart! Ordinary Oxford Shirts are notorious shrinkers. So smart men wear our Arrow GORN.' It's the swellest Oxford you ever saw. And it's Sanforized Shrunk . . guaranteed not to shrink! Gordon has other bless- ings, too. Among them is the famous Arrow collar ... the patented Mitoga cut for a perfect fit-and tstay-put" buttons rein- forced by special anchor- stitching. &RROl2. GORDON $2 State Street on the Campus ,:ul By ARNOLD DANA Can the Chicago tennis juggernaut be stopped from annexing its third consecutive Conference crown? If it can, what Big Ten team is strong enough to complete this herculean task? . These questions and innumerable others like them are the general drift of interrogation when the question of the Western Conference Tennis Tournament, to be held at Chicago May 29, 30, 31, is discussed. Since 1937, when the Maroons took the title away from Northwestern, they have been unbeatable both in dual play and in Conference play. Last year, they dropped but one match in dual meets while winning 60, and made a clean sweep of the Conference meet. Murphy Twins Lead The Big Berthas on the Maroon squad are the Murphy twins, Charlie Shostrum, Art Jorgenson, and John Krietenstein. The Murphys, Bill and Chet, play one and two singles re- spectively, and as a pair make up the first doubles team. They have played together ever since they have been knee high to a grass hopper, and as a result have developed an al- most unbeatable combination. Last year, they were named tenth in the national doubles rankings put out by the National Lawn Tennis Associ- ation. This year, the Maroons have con- tinued their blistering pace of the past two seasons, and have romped through their dual meets with unus- ual ease. Charles Johnson of Minne- sota crashed through to an unexpect- ed triumph when he downed the Chicago number six man to give the CAPS & GOWNS FOR ALL COLLEGES AND DEGREES Place your rental order now at Gophers their only point. The Wol- verines suffered the fate of the rest of the teams when they were shut- out, 9-0. Kidwell Might Upset Schostrum In this match, however, it was evi- dent that in the Conference play, one or two of the Weirmen might upset their powerful rivals should they meet. John Kidwell carried Charlie Shostrum to three sets be- fore finally losing out, and Jim Tob- in gave Chet Murphy quite a battle in the number one singles spot. The team which is out after Chi- cago's scalp more than any other is Northwestern. Three years ago, the Wildcats were sitting on top of the Big Ten tennis world, when suddenly they were ousted from their post and replaced by Chicago. This year, they have the best chance of any to de- throne the Maroons. However, their entire chance of victory depends on how the other schools fare in the early rounds. If a few Chicagoans can be eliminated early in the meet, the powerful juggernaut may be stopped, and a new champion crowned. BASEBALL'S BIG SIX Player, Clubs G AB R H Arnovich, Phillies 32 123 17 46. Foxx, Red Sox .. 21 75 19 28. McQuinn, Browns 32 130 25 48 J. Martin, Cards 20 65 17 24. Dickey, Yankees . 28 105 26 38 Medwick, Cards .. 28 113 19 40 Pet. .374 .373 .369 .369 .362 .354 I HOME RUNS - American: Greenberg, Tigers, 8; Gehringer, Tigers, 6; Chapman, Ath- letics, 5; Foxx, Red Sox, 5. National: McCormick, Reds, 8; Camilli, Dodgers, 8; Mize, Cards, 7; Ott, Giants, 7. Spring OVER 300 FINE MIVHAELS-STERN SUITS REDUCED 20% %2% 1 .I AMERICAN LEAGUE W L New York... .........23 6 Boston ...............16 10 Chicago ...............17 13 Cleveland'..............14 14 Washington...........13 16 Philadelphia ...........11 17 Detroit ................12 21 St. Louis ..............21 21 NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. .793 .615 .567 .517 .448 .407 .364 .344 Pct. .690 .677 .531 .484 .452 .414 .406 .3551 St. Louis,.. Cincinnati .. Chicago .... Pitsburgh Boston .... Brooklyn New York Philadelphia W ............20 ........ 21 ............17 ...... .... 15 ............ 14 12 ............13 11 L 9 10 15 16 17 17 19 20 Ru' r'C " , wy tii/ LOUNGING COMFORT.. 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