/ THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THU .......... PAETHE Michigan Drubs Irish Nine, 8-3; Netters Whip Toledo, 7-0 Six Trackmen Depart Today For California Michigan Teams Will Run Mile, Two-Mile Relays; Hoosiers Also In Field By BOB STAHL With the prospect of facing some of the best runners in the country, a crew of six Wolverine trackmen, ac- companied by Coach Ken Doherty will set out at 7 p.m. today by plane from Detroit for Los Angeles, where they will compete in the Los Angeles Coliseum on Saturday. Michigan will have both a mile re- lay team and a two-mile relay team entered in this meet. Al Thomas, Jack Leutritz, Bob Ufer, and Warren Breidenbach will make up the team for the shorter distance, while Dave Matthews, Johnny Kautz, Breiden- bach and Ufer will run in the two- mile relay. Will Face Three Teams The Wolverines will face three other teams in these two 'events, any or all of which are capable of breaking the existing American rec- ords. The two-mile race, especially, will see plenty of good running. The University of California team is fav- ored to break the American collegiate record of 7:37.8 seconds, set by Stan- ford last year, bul Drake University and Indiana will also compete, both presenting a squad of runners who are potentially capable of setting a new mark. California will also go into the meetas probable favorites in the mile relay. The Bears have two of the best quarter milersinvthe country, in the persons of Grover Klemner, who has consistently run the distance in 47 seconds flat, and Len Barnes, who has run 47.8 seconds several times, and the other two members of the team are also excellent sprint stars. Meet Hoosiers Again The Wolverines will have a chance to face some of the Hoosiers who nosed them out in the Big Ten meet at Minneapolis last Saturday. Paced by Campbell Kane, the new Big Ten 880 champion, the Hoosiers will also have little Roy Cochran and Paul Kendall, who placed one-two in the 440 yard dash, and Wayne Tolliver, who won the two-mile race. But Indiana California, and Drake will also find plenty of competition in the running of the Wolverines. On the two-mile team, Breidenbach is the present record-holder for having run the half-mile leg in the fastest time in Michigan's history, and Kautz and Matthews have run under 1:54 sec- onds. Ufer, the fourth member of the team, has not competed at the 880 distance this year, concentrating on the quarter-mile. In the mile relay, Breidenbach has run the quarter in 47.1 seconds, while Thomas, Ufer and Leutritz have all run the distance under 48 seconds. Gould Chalks Up Fifth Victory Of Year; Nelson Sparks Hitters (Continued from Page 1) lead in the third by scoring three runs on one hit. Mike Sofiak started proceedings by hitting a sharp single to left. With George Harms at bat, the fleet footed shortstop stole second, which wasn't necessary, however, as Harms walked on the, next pitch. Fisher then sent Gould up to bunt, and when the play went to third, Joe Campagna let the ball get by him. scoring Sofiak and Harms, with Gould going all the way to third. Nelson sent Mase home with the final run of the frame by hitting a long fly to center. The varsity scored two more runs in the fifth after two were out. Gould walked and went to second when Nel- son punched a single to right on the first pitch. Whitey Holman came through with =a hard single to center scoring Gould and sending Nelson to third. Dave came home when Chris- tenson got a scratch hit off Campag- na's glove. Subby got a lucky break when Wakefield's long drive to cen- ter was caught by Andy Chlebeck, after a hard run, for the final out. Nowicki was lifted in the sixth after he loaded the bases with none out. Harms, first to face Fred Metzger, new Irish pitcher, worked the count to three and two and then walked, forcing in Chamberlain. Mase Gould got on for the third straight time when Ray Pinelli fumbled his easy grounder allowing Ruehleand Sofiak to score. After Nelson had bunted i On A Silver Platter 1! MICHIGAN AB Nelson, cf ........ 5 Cartmill, cf .......0 Holman, lf.......5 Christenson, 2b .. 5 Wakefield, rf . ... 5 Chamberlain, 3b .. 4 Ruehle, lb ....... 4 Sofiak, ss ........ 4 Harms, c ........1 Gould, p.........2 Muir, p.... e.....1 R 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 2 0 H 2 0 1 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 4 0 12 2 4 1 0 A 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 4 0 1 0 E 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0, DAVIE NELSON Totals ...... 36 8 8 27 10 1 NOTRE DAME AB Campagna, 3b .... 5 Stewart, rf ....... 5 Pinelli, ss ........ 5 Chlebeck, cf ...... 4 B. Crimmins, c .... 4 Sobek, 2b ........ 3 Tallett, lb ....... .4 Warner, If....4 Nowicki, p ... 2 Metzger, p....... 1 Gore* ............1 R 0 1 1 1 0 04 0 0 0 0 0 H 2 1. 2 2 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 4 2 0 9 0 0 0 A 2 0 2 0 5 2 0 0 1 0 0 E 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0j to fill the bases again Holman, up for the second time in the inning, elnded Michigan's run-scoring festiv- ities for the day by hitting into a fast double play. Michigan Cards 15, Big 'TenCage Tilts The University of Michigan's Con- ference basketball schedule for the 1941-42 season will open Jan. 3 whenrthe Varsity meeLs Iowa in Ann Arbor. The schedule includes 14 other games and sends the Wolverine quin- tet against all nine Big Ten opponents at least once each. The complete schedule follows: Jan. 3 -- Iowa at Michigan. Jan. 5 - Michigan at Purdue. Jan. 10 - Illinois at Michigan. Jan. 12 --- Michigan at Northwest- ern. Linksmen Look Good In Defeat Fife Cards 69 In Match With Conference Kings By DON MELA DIVOT DIGGINGS: Despite the defeat at the hands of Illinois, the golfers played good ball on their weekend trip. The really significant figures on the 231/2 to 121/2 reversal at Illinois are: matches halved, three; matches won by one hole, three. Given a familiar course, the Wolverines might have made things w lot tougher for the Con- ference champions .-- Bib Fife's 69 -at Champaign still has the boys talking. In carding this fine score, Fife accumulated five birdies and an eagle. On the sixth hole, a par four, 436-yard hole, he put the ball in the hole on his second shot from a distance of over 200 yards, for the equivalent of a hole- in-one on a par three hole . . There was a reason for the re- markable comeback that the squad made against Northwestern on Mon- day, when they started the after- noon matches trailing by a score of six to three. It seems that the boys were quite annoyed at the ac- tions of a few of the Wildcat players in smoothing off the greens, which is technically wrong. So they held a council before the afternoon's play began and vowed to trounce the Wildcats. The results of the after- noon matches: Michigan 15, North- western 3 .... Laryngitis caught up with John Leidy at Evanston and stopped the usually steady stream of wisecracks that he puts forth. Amore serious victim of the throat infection was the winning streak in the doubles which Leidy and Johnny had brought through the season with them... For a while it looked as though the team would have to become students at Northwestern after Coach Court- right's car keys had severed diplo- matic relations with his pocket some- where on the golf course .. . Williams, Greene Ho uses Triumph In Softball Playoff By MARV BORMAN Williams House, leaders in the dormitory athletic contest, unleashed its full power yesterday afternoon with a 12-5 victory over Lloyd House in the first place softball playoffs at South Ferry Field. Brilliant pitching by steady hurler Ham Fisher, a home- iun by little Dick Belford and a spirit- ed infield enabled the Williamites to stem an early lead and end on top. Williams House will play in the soft- ball finals next week against Pres- cott House. In the second place playoffs, Greene House defeated Wiichell, 7-2, to bring the bacon home to the East Quad. Fletcher House swamped Chicago House, 11-2, in the third place play- offs, while Tyler walloped Adams Hiouse, 17-7, in the fourth place bracket. Michigan I-louse edxd out Wenley Iouse, 11-10, in another sec- ond place elimination. Beta Theta Pi scored an d 84vic- tory over Delta Tau Delta in a first place playoff game. Acacia bombard- ed Alpha Sigma Phi, 13-2, and Sig- ma Chi eliminated Phi Epsilon Pi, 10-3, in a third place playoff. Delta Kappa Epsilon won their first place playoff over Triangle, 4-2. Deke's star pitcher, Dwyer, fanned 13 Triangles in six innings. Phi Alpha Kappa took a full measure of Phi Delta Epsilon, 5-4. Both dormitory and fraternity soft- ball teams will play their champion- ship games in the coming week to bring the year's Intramural contests to a close. JANE RUSSELL, the buxom object of a recent bit of legislation on the part of Will Hays and his Holly- wood crew of moral-protectors, is also the imminent object of a regis- tered letter from Ann Arbor. Posted yesterday, the letter, which some fortunate employe of Uncle Sam will have the pleasure of delivering to Miss Russell in person, bears the collective hopes of a half-dozen Wolverine track- men for a date with the rising young movie starlet. Some of the six spikemen who will leave by plane this evening for the Los Angeles Coliseum Relays Satur- day, it seems, looked over the "sweat- er art" of Miss Russell, which has been displayed with pleasurable regu- larity in the nation's picture maga- zines lately, decided that they'd not be averse to a closeup view of the original, and dashed off, the message. S* * SPORTS HASH: Baseball Coach Ray Fisher passed the remark to sideline-observers a couple days ago that in another year his slug-f ging sophomore rightfielder, Dick Wakefield, would be as good a col- lege hitter as George Sisler was in his Michigan undergraduatedays before hie rose to the major leagues if the husky lad shows normal improvement. Fifty-eight year old James Edmund Lawrence, famous fullback on Michi- gan's "point-a-minute" grid jugger- naut of 1902, died Sunday ...A colored portrait of Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost, four feet in diam- eter, has been hung just below the clock in the Field House which bears his name . . . the old Daily Double, Don Wirtchafter, received his draft questionnaire a couple days ago. Only three feet separated Bob Barnard from the 5,000 mile air jaunt to the coast with the Wolver- ine mile relay team . . . Bob and Jack Leutritz ran the crucial 440 yards yesterday to determine which Major League I -Standigs AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. G; Cleveland .. 23 12 .657 Chicago . . 18 11 .621 2 Detroit .... 16 15 .516 5 New York .. 17 17 .500 5/z Boston .... 14. 14 .500, 52 Washington 14 19 .424 8 Philadelphia 13 18 .419 8 St. Louis .. 10 19 .345 10 Yesterday's Results Boston 4, Detroit 2. New York 10, St. Louis 9. Philadelphia 6, Cleveland fa. Chicago 5, Washington 2 NATIONAL I:AGI; W L Pet, GC 5t. ILouis ., 20 9 .690 Brooklyn , . 22 10 .688 New York .. 16 13 .552 4 Chicago .. 13 15 .464 6 '1 Cincinnati . .13 17 .433 7/ PittsburghI 11 14 .423 7 Boston . . 12 18 .400 8%V Philadelphia 10 20 333 10% 2 Yesterday's Resirilts Chicago 9, Brooklyn . Pittsburgh 7, New York 5. Cincinnati 9, Boston 6. Philadelphia 6, St. Louis 4 (1 inn- ings). h.a-____ -- - - _ _ -__ __ _ one would fill the fourth berth on the quartet .. Jack won by an1 yard in the slow time of 50.8 sec- onds.¢t CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY of Wash- I ington, D.C., capitulated to the l national defense effort yesterday . . 1 its potential football squad slashed1 to only 13 men by the draft, Uni-' versity officials decided to cancel thet seven-game schedule arranged forI 1941 . . . Another draft note con- cerns lanky Neil MacIntyre, sopho- more hurdler who picked up a fifth place point in the high barrier 'event for the Wolverines Saturday at Min- neapolis . . . Neil drops out of school today to drive to the West Coast, where he will officially take up his duties as a reserve Army offi- cer at Camp Roberts, Calif., May 29. A pair of Maize and Blue year- ling spikemen, Chuck 'Pinney andj Pete Wege, have leveled a dual as- sault upon frbsh track records . yesterday tmooth-stepping Chuck, blond timber-topper, equaled the all-time mark of 24.2 seconds for the 220-yard dash set by Stan Kelley in 1936 . . . earlier in the week the husky Wege tossed the javelin 196 feet 6 inches to better his own yearling mark by more 1 than four feet . . . the toss Was just nine feet better than the one which copped the Conference out- door title last week. I- V N 9fli7FOLU 0, 0 Cindermen Casanovas * Fisher Lauds Wakefield By HAL WILSON Daily Sports Editor Netters Defeat ToledoEasily Weir Uses Only Three Regulars To Win, 7-0 (Continued from rPage 1) in the only other singles match, 6-1, 6-4. The doubles matches were just rou- tine work for the Wolverines. Gamon and Schafjander whipped Bishop and Kniseley quite handily, 6-2 6-3, and Porter and Bradley lost only one game to Sweet and Bowman in winning 6-1, 6-0. Today the Wolverines will prac- tice on the Ferry Field courts in preparation for their match with Wayne University's strong;aggrega- tion tomorrow in Detroit. The Tartars have lost only four of their 14 matches and should give the Ann Arbor lads a good tussle. Invest In for Summer Comfort FOX TENT & AWNING CO. 624 S. Main Phone 2-4407 ORDER CAPS-and GOWNS at Ask bout our ECONOMY RENTAL p/a/ Totals .......38 .3 11 *Gore batted for Metzger Michigan .......003 023 Notre Dame .... 000 003 27 12 5 in ninth. 000-8 000--3 Runs batted in: Neison, Holman, Christenson, Harms, Chlebeck, B. Crimmins, Warner. Two base hits: Wakefield, Campagna 2. Double plays: Wakefield to Sofiak; Sobek to Crimmins to Tallett, Campagna to Tallett. Left on bases, Michigan 7, Notre Dame 9. Hit by pitched ball: Sofiak by Nowicki; Ruehl by Metz- ger. Bases on balls: Gould 1, No- wicki 2, Metzger 2. Struck out: by Muir 3, Nowicki 1, Metzger 1. Htis off: Gould 6 in 5 innings; No-' wicki 6 in 5 innings. Stolen bases: Chamberlain, Sofiak, Pinelli. Win- ning pitcher: Gould, losing pitcher, Nowicki. Umpires: Cleary and Fink. Time of game 1:57. Jan. Jan. Jan.; Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb.; Feb. Feb. 17 19 24 26 31 14 16- 21 23 28 Michigan at Minnesota. Michigan at Wisconsin. Ohio State at Michigan. Michigan at Indiana. Minnesota at Michigan. Michigan at Illinois. Indiana at Michigan. Michigan at Iowa. Chicago at Michigan. Michigan at Chicago. March 2 - Purdue at Michigan. DOC MAY, SPORTS-SCIENFTST: BroughtPrecision To Track Starting Make this Easy Test' Prove To Yourself That This Summer Suit Holds Its Press I By IIQE SELTZER Folks, step right up and meet Dr. George May, the man who made a science of starting trackmen from their marks. When Doc came to Michigan in 1901, immediately after receiving his medical degree at Yale, he was assis- tant to Keene Fitzpatrick, who wa§ among other things the Varsity track coach. Thus Doc received his primer course in starting as he helped Fitz- patrick whip his runners into shape. At that time.it was customary for starters to stand behind the sprinters, in order that the latter never suspect, when the gun would crack. But it occurred to Doc's analytical mind that if the runners couldr't see the starter, neither could the official keep an eye on them to see that no skul- duggery be perpetrated. Such little bits of cheaty-cheaty, that is, as edging the hands in front of the tape or rocking slowly forward in order to jump the rest of the field. 'Acuity Of Vision' So Doc asked Fritz if it would be O.K. to stand abreast the sprint- ers in order to keep them in his "acuity of vision." And when Fitz said it was jake by him the sports scientist planted himself in this un- precedented position, where he for- three types one can appreciate that evermore forestalled the nasty devices it takes no little patience and acute- of those who tried to run with their ness of vision to effect a fair start. wits instead of their legs. The fast starter gets jittery and Now Doc has a very funny notion about starting a race. He believes that everyone should get an even break. And for it he has been censored and even cursed roundly, because he will call the lads back again and again until he is satisfied that the entiire field has broken cleanly. And what complicates things and makes start- ing a headache for the man with the Derringer is that there are three types of starts common among dashmen: a. The quick start. At the "get set" signal the man is up off his knee like a shot and distributes his weight in a split-second. b. The slow start. The sprinter comes into the "get set" position slowly, it requiring him some time to balance,4his weight properly. c. The rolling start. This is the ruse of the clever gent, who first settles his weight on the legs, then drifts it slowly forward onto his hands. When the cannon pops he has a significant advantage over the others starting from dead inertia. Now in a field representing all jumps. Then he is afraid of being left behind and hustles back into position. But Doc waits until he is all set again before sending them off. Reassures Them First Doc May knows that runners be- come increasingly on edge as their event approaches. That's why he hud- dles them before each race and tells them he's going to start them slowly. He wants the boys to understand that he won't fox them up. Even after three false starts, when he might well wax a bit rugged, he says, "Boys, I'm the same old guy. I'll hold you all afternoon until I get you off to an even start." Sooner or later the com- petitors catch on and make a clean break on the gun. When that finally happens Doc twirls his six-shooter on his forefinger and 'complacently watches the boys sweep down the straightaway. For hE knows that, if the runners blaspheme from here to hell and back, the lac who breaks the tape will be not the cleverest, but the fastest man in the race. t i ,r , . .- r . *Coronado Suits-are porous, almost' weightless, and frosty feeling-but they also resist wrinkles and stay smart! Busi ness and leisure models, light and dark, shades. Cool *Celanese Rayon 50 Trimmed. Coat and ,Trouser.. 3L2 ,Air Coole d Holds Its Press Frosty Fe . I Boynton Will Manage Next Year's T rckmen Charles Boynton, of South Bend, Indiana, was named senior track mnanager for the 1941-42 season ,at the annual track banquet held at the Union Monday night. Boynton, who succeeds Jack Spi- talny, is a member of Phi Eta Sigma "ionorary fraternity, a member of Mimes, and is affiliated with :Beta Theta Pi. Five men were also named as jun- ior managers. They are Tom O'Con- nor, Bob Grimshaw, Bill Strayer, Jer- ry Sheats, and Wally Hellman. Seniors: Order yo iii Commencemnen Annou ncemnentIs I IMP0RTED, TYE*AIR COOLED SUIT THAT HOLDS ITS PR1fS As Featured in LIFE /, Now! State Street AINCB 1 i ,. at Burr, Patterson & Amild 1209 South University Liberty I,-- : ORDER YOUR CAPS AND GOWNS NOW r