THE MIChIGAN DAILY Barry Hurls Michigan Nine To 3-2 Trinmph Over Purdue (.) , .. _ IN THIS CORNER By Mel Fine berg Risky Business ... Davis Cup tennis seems to carry in- ternational dynamite. Last summer, when pon Budge and Gene Mako toured Europe, they were scheduled to play someplace in Yugoslavia-and found themselves in the middle of a near civil war. Nobody knew whether they were to play in Zagreb, a coast metropolis, or Belgrade, the seat of the government. Tennis associations of both cities sold tickets and both re- fused to arbitrate. No civil war resulted because the Americans played in both cities and both sides were placated. A recent case arose in Poland when the "German" team met the Poles. Playing for Germany were Roderick Menzel and George von Meta. Now these two gentlemen are people of high character and of a correspond- ingly high tennis calibre. But it seems that Menzel once played for a strip of land in central Europe formerly known as Czechoslovakia. And Von Metaxa used to call his country Aus- tria. But times being what they are for reasons to be found on the edi- torial page, these two tennis players found themselves in German livery-- a fact which didn't seem to worry theni butwhich confounded the Poles no end. In fact, the Poles were so exas- perated that they did what no well-groomed tennis fan should do; they hurled boos and catcalls down on the heads of these two expatriates. It turned out that a real German named Henner Hen- kel won the deciding match but this placated the Poles not a jot. Of course, it may not mean a thing but if a Pole had climbed out of the stands and called Men- zel a cad, an international inci- dent might have arisen and no- body knows whatl might have happened. Junior Allows But Four Hits; Gedeon Stars Big First Sacker Drives In Two Markers; Peck Gets Three For Four (Continued from Page 1)j proved the Riveters' last gasp, as the Wolverine hurler held Coach Dutch; Fehring's men hitless for the re- mainder of the game. The Wolverines tallied their win- ning run in the sixth when Bill Steppon, playing shortstop in place of Mike Sofiak who was out with a sort; a. rn, rapped a three-bagger to deep left. Leo Beebe then scored Steppon with a long sly to left field- er Vernon. The victory wound up the Confer- ence schedule for Michigan and left Coach Ray .Fisher's charges a chance to tie for second place in theBig Ten standings. Should Iowa lose its remaining two games, Indians will re- gain the Conference crown and the Hawkeyes will fall back into a second place tie with the Wolverines. The Varsity will end its season at Get Three Hits In Wolverine Victory While Jack Barry was limiting the Purdue Boilermakers to but four hits and two runs, Capt. Walt Peckinpaugh (left) and Elmer Gedeon closed their Big Ten careers in convincig fashion by each pounding out three hits in four times at bat. Two of first baseman Gedeon's blows drove in valuable Wolverine runs, while third baseman Peckinpaugh garnered a lusty triple and two singles in addition to scoring a run in Michigan's 3-2 victory. ~- --~--- - r --- -r - . - --f EastLansing Tuesday with a return game against Michigan State. Michiga--3n AB Pink, cf............3 Trosko, If..........4 Peckinpaugh, 3b.....4 Gedeon, lb......... 4 Smick, rf.........3 Lisagor, 2b......... 3 Steppon, ss......... 4 Beebe, c ............ 3 Barry, p ........... 4 Tctals ........ . 'Purduu--2 A Dickinson, Cf...... Dean, rf.......... Mackiewicz, 3b..... Vernon, If......... Hearne, 2b .......... Thompson, ss ........ Smithson, lb ....... Bredewater, Art, c .. Emert, p ........... Bredewater, Arn, p . *Lyboult ............ 32 B 3 4 3 3 4 2 3 3 0 1 1 R 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 3: R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 H 0 1 3 3 0 0 2 1 1 O 0 2 1 12 0 6 1 5 0 11 27 H O 2 2 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 3 0 2 0 8 1 8 0 1 0 0 0 0 A 0 0 5 0 0 1 1 3 3 13 A 0 0 3 0 3 1 0' 1' 0 0 0 8 EEN in a banner in the St. Louis Post Dispatch: "Armstrong to take long rest after beating Roder-- ick." This is very interesting but just the same we wonder what Roderick will be doing next week. CORNERSTONES: Out of the 11 football coaches in town last weekend, six conceded Michigan at least a share in the Big Ten title. Some were saying that Bill DeCor- revant wouldn't start next year. If we recall correctly, Tom Harmon didn't start against Michigan State last year but it is rumored he was around after that . . . Elmer Lay- den, Notre Dame's coach and one of the Four Horsemen, called red-head- ed Ollie Hahnenstein of Northwes- tern, the nearest thing to Red Grange . Hahnenstein didn't star against Michigan but was very much in evi- dence after the game got going . . . As Layden ruefully remarked, he was also among the present in the Notre Dame affair which the Irish snatched, 9-7. Wildcat Hurler Pitches No-Hitter Over Chicago EVANSTON, Ill., May 27. -().- Bill Syring, right-hand senior pitch- ing star from New York City, became the first Big Ten hurler to produce a no-hit, no-run game this season when he turned the trick today as North- western crushed Chicago, 10 to 0. Syring allowed five men to reach first, three on walks but only one got as far as second. The contest was a tight pitching duel until the sev- enth when Nick Conteas smashed out a home run with the bases full to put the game on ice. Totals .........27 2 4 27 *Batted for Smithson in 9th. Michigan .......... 101 001 000-3 Purdue ............ 001 010 000-2 Errors: Peckinpaugh, Art Brede- water. Runs batted in: Gedeon 2, Beebe, Mackiewicz. Three base hits: Peckinpaugh, Steppon. Stolen bases: Gedeon, Dickinson, Dean. Sacrifices: Mackiewicz, Hearne, Emmert, Beebe. Double plays: Thompson to Hearne to Smithson; Steppon to Lisagor to Gedeon. Bases on balls: off Barry 3, off Emmert 2, off Arn Bredewater 1. Struck out: by Barry 4, by Emmert 3, by Arn Bredewater 4. Hits: off Em- nert 11 in 6 innings; off Arn Brede- water 0 in 3 innings. Hit by pitcher : by Barry. (Vernon). Losing pitcher: Emmert. Umpires: Cramer and Wills. Tric Tipton Gets Position With Philadelphia Team RICHMOND, Va. May 27.-(AP)- The Times-Dispatch said tonight it learned on good authority that Eric G. Tipton, 24-year-old All-American football player at Duke University, would join the Philadelphia Ath- letics at Detroit June 8. Tipton, who hit a better than .400 clip during his three years of college baseball, will graduate from Duke, June 7. h __________ - Golfers Leave Title Drive Five Wolverines AttemptI To Win Big Ten Meet Five golfers will leave this morn- ing for the Big Ten golf champion- ships to be held at Chicago Monday and Tuesday, and in their hands lie Michigan's hopes for the Conference crown that they have not worn since the departure of Chuck Koscis in 1936. The team selected to equal or bet- ter last year's third place behind Minnesota and Northwestern con- ;ists of Jack Emery, Jim Loar, Capt. Bob Palmer, Tom Tussing, and Ed Hoagland. Hoagland, who shot a blazing sub-par 67 Friday was chosen in preference to Lynn Riess. Ten Teams Compete Ten five-man teams will be entered by the Conference schools in the 72 holes of competition to be played at the Kildeer Country Club. Each school will post their best four totals for the 72 holes at the end of the second day. The best 72-hole score carded by ny one player will decide the individual title, now held by Sid Richardson for the second year. Michigan won the Big Ten title five years in a row from 1932 to 1936 with the aid of Johnny Fischer and Chuck Koscis who also brought the Wolverine teams three individual crowns in that period. Emery Leads Attack This year, the Michigan squad en- ters against a strong field dominated by Minnesota, Illinois and Northwes- tern. The Wolverines emerged from their 14 dual match schedule this season with a record of 10 wins, and in doing so proved to be one of the best-balanced golf teams to be' turned out by Coach Ray Court- right in quite some time. The strong Michigan attack will be led by Jack Emery who stands out as a serious threat to Sid Richard- son's supremacy in the individual matches. Four men capable of finish- ing up at the top in the individual play together with Emery make the Wolverines one of the favorites to Varsity Net men To Seek Third , Conference With high hopes for attaining third place in the Big Ten tennis meet to- morrow, Tuesday, and Wednesday at Chicago, Coach Leroy Weir and seven Varsity netters will leave Ann Arbor this noon. The seven, as an- nounced by Coach Weir after yester- day's matches are: Capt. Don Per- cival, Jim Tobin, John Kidwell, Sam Durst, Ed Morris, Steve Woolsey, and Jim Porter. Seeding Is Tonight The favorites for ;op honors in the meet are Chicago and Northwes- tern, with the Wolverines and Illi- nois fighting it out for third. The entire outcome of the meet will re- sult from the seeding and drawings made up by the coaches tonight at Chicago. Last year, the Wolverines were un- lucky in the draw and as a result were eliminated early. However, due to their dual meet record this year, many of the Weirmen will be seeded and avoid meeting the aces for the first round. Wolverine Hopes Slim As far as individual honors are concerned, Sam Durst has the best opportunity to take top honors in the number six position. His main opposition will come from Eben Jones of Illinois and Charlie John- son of Minnesota. In the doubles, Durst will pair with Steve Woolsey in the third team, which is favored to win. Outside of these two places, the Wolverines' hopes for top honors are very slim. Chicago will probably capture four singles and two doubles, with Northwestern taking the other singles. Trojans Make Record Score To Win IC 4-A USC Track Stars Pile Up 71 Points; Woodruff Wins 880 And Mile NEW YORK, May 27. -()- A smooth-working, high-geared piece of track and field machinery swept through the 63rd championships of the Intercollegiate A.A.A.A., tday and turned in a set of record-shat- tering performances that should stand for many years to come. Before a crowd of 7,500 in Tri- borough Stadium, and under perfect weather conditions, the Trojans of Southern California piled up 71/2 points, highest in the meet's history, to win the team title for the second straight2year and the ninth time since 1925. Winning five individual events, sharing in two others and adding the mile relay championship as a crowning touch, the Trojans spread- eagled the field so badly that Pitts- burgh, in second place, had only 26 points and none of the others got beyond 20. California was third with 16% and Michigan State fourth with 15. But while the Pacific Coast Confer- ence champions were making good so handsomely on their awesome repu- tation, Long John Woodruff of Pitts- burgh did all that could be expected of a lone Easterner standing up against this 20-man Western inva- sion. In his final LC.4-A appearance, Woodruff won the 440-yard and 880- yard titles for the third straight year and made this finale the best of the three. Bob Peoples' javelin throw of 223 feet 11/ inches, which led the quali- fiers yesterday, stood up as the best performance of the two days. U.S.C.'s Jim Humphrey tied the record of 14.4 seconds in winning the 120- yard high hurdles. Heyliger Gets Coaching Job Former Michigan Hockey Star Goes To Illinois Vic Heyliger, former captain of the Michigan hockey team, was yester- day appointed head coach of the University of Illinois, it was an- nounced yesterday by Illini athletic officials. Heyliger, who led the Wolverine squad to a tie for the Big Ten cham- pionship during the 1936-37 season, was also a member of the Michigan baseball squad during his under- graduaterdays. He played catcher and center field. The new Illinois coach signed a contract with the Chicago Black- hawks the year after his graduation but an injury forced him to quit professional hockey for the year. Last season, he played amateur hockey with the Holzbaugh-Ford team in the Michigan-Ontario League. Dan Sullivan, husky, shot putter from Wayne High School, tossed the 12-pound shot 53 ft. 9% in. to set a new Class B mark in the annual Michigan High School Track and Field Meet at East Lansing yesterday. Sullivan's effort Was within seven-r eighths of an inch of the Class A rec- ord of 53 ft. 10 3/8 in., held by Sill Watson, captain of Michigan's 1939 track squad.r r r) Standings in Big League Majors AMERICAN LEAGUE Rigney, Frazier and Tresh; Milnar St. Louis ......110 010 002- 5 8 0 and Hemsley. Detroit .......103 132 02x---12 18 0 Kennedy and Sullivan; Bridges and NATIONAL EAGUE Tebbetts. Cincinnati ...... 000 01 1 .10 _--3 10 1 Philadelphia . . . .011 000 000-2 6 1 Lois......000 10 2 4 1 New York .......620 000 00x-8 5 2 St. Lours ........100 000 0 -2 4 1 Parmellee and Haze; Gomez and 'Called in 9th, rain). Dickey. Grissom, Davis, L. Moore and Lim- Philadelphia . .500 120 100- 9 12 2 bardi; Cooper, Shouji and Ow,.'n. New York .....010 230 50x-11 10 1 New York..261 000 100- 10 14 1 Joyce, Dean, Potter and Brucker; Philadelphia . .001 000 000. - 1 8 4 Pearson, Sundra and Dickey. Schumacher and Dannin Ilol- Washington .. .000 000 013- 4 11 3 lingsworth, Henry, Schott 'o1 ide- Boston ........401 120 03x--11 11 1 ter, Millies. Deshong and Ferrell; Grove and Boston........100 010 000 -2 5 1 Desautels. Brooklyn.......100 120 00x--4 7 1 Washington .. . .200 001 300-6 11 1 Boston ........005 000 101-7 10 1 Fette, Erickson, Shoffner and Lo- Krakauskas, Appleton and Early; pez; Hamlin and Pheps. Auker, Wilson and Desautels. Pittsburgh-.....220 022 10 -9 11 2. Chicago .......100 200 102--6 12 2 Chicago.......000 000 100--.1 5 1 Cleveland ......302 002 00x--7 11 1 f Sewell and Berres; Higbe, Harrell, -Lillard and Mancuso. Watson's Shot Mark Nearly Tied By Youth Caps, Gowns & Hoods ________y____ _ __ For FACULTY and CRADUATES Complete Rental and Sales Service THE BOO K ROOM Selewt Book and Rental Library 308 South State Street Phone 5930 Second Floor nt Here's Service that Speaks for Itself,. FOX'S finest weatherproof awnings will improve the looks of your home You will marvel at the effect of our new Venetian Blinds. Rent our Bridge Tables and Chairs for your fra- tenity or sorority party. 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