THE MICHIGAN DAILY Colfers hip Irish; Wolverine Nine Meets Normal oda Jack Emery's Par Card Wins Medal Honors Chalks Up Three Birdies On Last Nine; Palmer' Rallies To Win Match1 By WOODY BLOCKt Michigan's smooth swinging golf- I ers kept their undefeated record in- tact yesterday as they dropped thet powerful Notre.Dame team, 18/2-81/2 at the Univetsity course, gaining re-t venge for last year's drubbing by the Irish. Handing the South Benders their first defeat in three years in the best ball play during the morning rounds, the Wolverines eked out a 10-8 edge in the afternoon singles matches with the little giant, Jack Emery, leading the way with the medal score for the day, a par 72. Emery teamed with Capt. Bobi Palmer in the best ball matches to; take three points from Sam Neild and Walter Hagen, Jr., the Notre Dame captain, as Dave Osler, soph-] omore playing his first intercolle-] giate match, paired with Tom Tuss-, ing to sweep their match against] Bill Schaller and George Schreiber. Black Shoots 73 .!" Bill Black, shooting a one-over-- par 73, and Lynn Reiss, with a 75, dropped a half point in their four- some to give the Irish their only points in the best ball play. Tussing led the Wolverine victory] parade in the singles matches as he tool. all three points from Schreiber with rounds of 37-36--73. Palmer couldn't get his putter working, buti managed to rally on the last ninei and take his match and two pointsi from Phil Donahue, who shot a 76.1 Standing two down at the turn, Palmer evened his match on the 16th hole and cinched it on the 18th with a sensational birdie-four. His second shot was pulled far to the left of the green, but he recovered beautifully with a pitch 20 feet from the hole. He sank the putt. Emery Cards 34 A sub-par 34 for Emery on the back nine saved the hard hitting Wolverine who was two down as he. teed off on the tenth hole. He put three birdies together on the home nine andewalked off with a 2-1 .victory over Neild who shot a 73. Putter trouble hampered Lynn Reiss who was paired against Hagen. He shot a 78 to the Notre D'ame captain's 77, but dropped the match 2%- 2. Black and Schaller halved. their match, each taking 1%/2 points. Notre Dame's Bill Wilson, with a putter that banged them in from all angles, beat John Barr, playing his first match for Michigan, 2-1. Barr shot rounds of 40-37-77 to Wilson's 38-38--76 Get The Liniment! Union, Daily Agree, On Softball Game Ah ancient and terrific rivalry that until now has produced nothing but boasts, threats and innuendoes Will be climaxed Saturday when the Michigan Union meets the Michigan Daily in a softball game at Ferry Field. For years now challenges have been hurled from one side to the other, but nobody ever did much about the latter. Yesterday, however, President of the Union Don Tread- well signed to meet the Carl Peter- sen club and settle the issue once and for all. The Union made only one demand in scheduling the battle. "Petersen and Stan Swinton must play for the imitation newspaper men," they said. "That's all we need to win." At The Daily offices, reports were rampant that the women's staff would be sufficient to take care of the weak opposition. "We'll prove concisively that in Union there is not strength," one reporter pointed out. Tigers Nose Out White Sox CHICAGO, April 22.-(P)--The De- troit Tigers required the services of no less than five pitchers and a timely pinch-single in the ninth by Earl Averill to defeat the Chicago White Sox 6 to 5 today. IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG ...... ...-r. . -- just Tinhking.. .. HERE comes a time in every man's life when he must seize fortune by the forelock, give it a prodigious twist (you can twist a forelock) and break its back. We rather like that sentence: it sounds original albeit a bit reminiscent of something or other. Our problem now is to tie it in with the rest of this column. Let's see. Football isn't in sea- son (except spring football which doesn't really count); hai lai is out 'cause we can't pronounce it; baseball-ah yes baseball. De- lightful sport that. Let's see, baseball baseball base yankees, yanke, dimaggio, dimag sick, sick ... dimag sick, yanke sick, boston, good team boston, foxx, foxx and william and doerr (how spell doerr) and grove, old man grove buit still plenty . . Ah yes, we've stumbled upon it with relish aforethought. With Dimaggio out, (not to mention Pow- ell and Ruffing and Pearson with perennial sore arms) now's the chance for Boston to get on the ball 'if they're ever to get on ball. And with that we leave the subject of major league baseball. S* * LAST Saturday afternoon, at ap- proximately 2:27%/2, a white- headed lad could be seen running down State St., toward Ferry Field, with the gretaest of speed and the maximum of need. His name, al- though he would never have stopped to give it had some questioner ques- tioned, was Don Holman, sophomore outfielder on the baseball team. It seems that there was a base- ball game at 2:30 and Mr. Hol- man, so concerned was he about the outcome of aforementioned conflict, had fallen asleep. Yes, Mr. Holman, 'anxious to steal a little cat nap, had overslept and he had to hasten toward the ball orchard lest he miss the game. I-M Sports: Dwyer Fans 15 Men Bit Is Defeated, 2-1 Raymond Dwyer, Delta Kappa Ep- silon's speed ball artist pitched in vain today, for after fanning 15 Phi Sigma Kappa players his team finished on the short end of a 2-1 score. Paul Keller twirled the Psi Up- silon nine to a 6-0 victory over Alpha Kappa Lambda, striking out nine men. In the other games, Chi Phi wal- loped Lambda Chi Alpha, 15-0, Beta Theta Pi trimmed Sigma Phi Epsi- lon, 9-2, Theta Delta Chi trounced Kappa Sigma, 11-6, and Alpha Sig- ma Phi won by a forfeit over Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Wenley House whitewashed the Williams team, 20-0, in a Dormitory League game. In other Dorm games, Fletcher Hall beat Chicago House. 8-4, Lloyd House blanked Winchell, 10-0, - Allen-Rumsey won a forfeit from Adams, and Vaughn House gained a default from the Sanitar- ians. - - - - As it was, he just managed to make it in time, but had no chance to par- ticipate in fielding or batting prac- tice. 'ORNERSTONES: What are the Texas backfield and line coaches' doing in town? . . . They arrived yesterday morning and have been here since . . . There is one Michi- gan man on California's' football squad . . . He is Hank Zacharias who played football under frosh track mentor Chet Stackhouse when the latter was a high school coach in Saginaw . . . Zacharias played on the jayvees there last year and is one of three men fighting for the var- sity left halfback post on the Bears . Jack Meyer claims his trouble is glandular . . . In passing-what a fine day it will be when sportswriters don't describe an athlete's outstand- ing day by putting some variation on "he did everything except sell pea- nuts and take tickets" . . . The um- pire behind the plate Saturday in; sisted that the complaining catcher do his complaining without turning his head around . . . Wonder what the matter was-didn't he want the crowd to know he had called one wrong.. .Fred Trosko had fin- ally, after two years of promise, start- ed to hit . . . Bill Steppon is major league timber. Grapplers Win ,junior Crown Captain-Elect Bill Combs Gains 191-Pound Title Chalking up 19 points with three titles, one second and a third place, the University of Michigan matmen garnered the National A.A.U. junior Wrestling Championship over the weekend in Detroit. Michigan State College took second place behind the Wolverines with ten points, in the tournament held at Fordson High School. Bill Combs, newly elected Varsity captain for 1941, captured the 191 pound crown. Competing in the heavier weight bracket, although he wrestled at 152 pounds, Combs gave evidence that he had what it takes, and more, to win a national title. The other two individual titles went to Emanuel "Knobby" Knob- lock at 174 pounds and sophomore Fred. Klemac at 118. Knoblock, a senior, has been a varsity reserve to Harland Danner, Frank Morgan and Don Nichols for the past three years. Klemac who made a good varsity record before being replaced by Tom Weidig later in the season, also came through with a National Junior A.A.U. crown. Other Michigan points were tal- lied by Tom Weidig, who placed sec- ond at 123 pounds, and Art Paddy, varsity reserve, who took third at 158 pounds. MAJOR LEAGUE RESULTS American League Detroit 6, Chicago 5 Cleveland 5, St. Louis 2 National League Cincinnati 6, St. Louis 1 Pittsburgh 9, Chicago 5 - -- Barry, Bond, And Stoddard To Face Ypsi Fisher Seeks To Keep Ace MOunSmen, In Shape For BigTen Games Captain Charlie Pink and his Wol- verine teammates play host to theirs country cousins from Ypsilanti,' Michigan Normal, at Ferry Field ata 4:00 p.m. today. At the same time, however, Coach1 Ray Fisher's charges will be on guard for any uprising on the part of their somewhat ambitious guests. For there's nothing that would give the Ypsi boys more pleasure than1 taking a fall out of their big time rivals. Three Aces To Pitch For this reason and because Fisher wants to keep his ace pitch- ers in trim for the impending Con- ference battles, the wily Wolverine tactician will employ Jack Barry, Lyle Bond and Mickey Stoddard in three-inning stretches in today's game with the Hurons. Stoddard, especially, should be looking forward to the tilt with the visitors. It was in the two games with Normal last year that Mickey established himself as a first-class hurler. Walking into the first game with one out and the bases loaded, the husky righthander promptly proceed- ed to retire the side scoreless and continue on for five more innings yielding one lone hit. He continued to display the well known Indian sign on the Ypsilanti lads in the sec- ond game when he again let them down with one hit over a four-inning stretch. To Use Same Lineups The remainder of the lineup will be the same that split the double- header with Wisconsin over the past week-end, Forest Evashevski, whose lame throwing arm is rounding into condition, may see some action in the outfield or possibly at first base. Michigan Normal will bring to the Ferry Field diamond a lineup com- prised of six veterans who managed to hold the Varsity to a 5-5 tie last year. The Hurons displayed a wealth of batting power in their opening games with Alma College last week. Normal swamped the Scots in both ends of a two-game series, 17- and 8-3. Ray Dennis, Ypsi ace, who pitched a one-hit game against Alma, will be Coach Ray Stites' choice to face the Wolverines. The lineups: MICHIGAN MICH. NORMAL Pink, cf Sierra, c Holman, rf Newlands, cf Sofiak, ss Drusbacky, 2b Steppon, 2b Borovich, lb Trosko, If Oxley, If Ch'mb'rl'n, 3b Heffernan, rf Ruehle, lb Shada, ss Harms, c Grady, 3b Barry, p Dennis, p Iudiana Seeks Vengeance At Drake Relays S11 ud Weather HlAumpers Netterl's As Conference Opener Loon By UERM EPSTEIN The fierce track rivalry between Michigan and Indiana which has been raging all this year will break out again this weekend at the Drake Re- , lays. Right up through last Satur- day when the Wolverines cap- tured Indiana's Quadrangular Relays, Michigan has come out on top, but only by the closest of margins. At Drake, revenge will be part of the motive for some blood-and-thun- der battles in the relays, with those Michigan teams which were nosed out over the weekend seeking to prove their superiority, and Indiana trying to upset the Wolverine quartets in the events in which they have lost to Michigan's Conference champions. Close Two-Mile Relay Probably the greatest rivalry will be in the two-mile relay in which Johnny Kautz, Tommy Jester, Capt. Ralph Schwarzkopf and Dye Hogan will continue the fight which began when the latter three were part of Michigan's medley relay team. Indiana has run almost the same four men in both the two-mile and medley relays, so the Wolverines were looking on familiar backs when the Hoosier quartet nosed them out on a brilliant 1:51.4 anchor leg by Camp- bell Kane. Even so, this great piece of running barely enabled Kane to nose out Hogan, and this week, say the Michigan boys, they will be so far in front at the start of the last leg that Coach Doherty himself could finish in front. Ostroot's Fine Showing The results of last weekend's com- petition were, on the whole, very pleasing to Doherty. George Os- troot's fine showing in his varsity ap- pearance was probably the biggest thing. Ostroot outflung Indiana's Archie Harris in the discus, and fin- ished third in the shot put. His 147 feet in the discuss was excellent un- der the conditions. Carl Culver's 23 feet, six and three- fourths inches in the broad jump was the second best jump of his life, and coming in the first competition of the outdoor season, bodes well for Michigan's fortunes in the event. Cul- ver's sprinting on the sprint relay team was also excellent. Canham To Be Tested Don Canham broke Dave Albrit- ton's Field House record at Indiana when he leaped 6 feet, 5 1-5 inches. This week, however, his season record, which shows him to be unbeaten, will face its severest test when he mat- ches leaps with Don Boydston, Okla- homa Aggie sophomore who has jumped six feet, eight and one-half inches already this season. Canham will have to give everything he has this time, and there's no telling how high he will go with that sort of com- petition. I h s" Y X. i 2 T w Ap" a' 8 Y Typewriters Office and Portable Models New, and Re onditioned. ..__ Bought, Sold Rented, Exchanged, i , .. *- __- I III III I i