SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1941 PAGE ThREE THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tennis Team Wins Big Ten Title; Nine Defeats Spartans d By ART HILL Diamond Title Clincher .. . RAY FISHER'S great Michigan baseball team put the Big Ten championship on ice Thursday when they defeated Northwestern, 9-7, but it wasn't until the next afternoon that the boys slammed the refrigera- tor door on the Conference crown by handing the Wildcats a 12-4 wallop- ing. It developed that the second victory was more important than it seemed, too, for Iowa took two victories from Wisconsin on Friday and Saturday. A pair of wins over Ohio State next weekend for the Hawkeyes will give themn a copped-and-dropped mark of 9 and 3 as compared with 10 and 2 for the Wolverines who have finished their Conference schedule. Big offensive guns for Michigan in the Memorial Day tilt were George Ruehe and Bud Chamber- lain. Ruehe had three hits in three attempts while the Wolver- ine third-baseman gathered three bingIles in six trips to the dish. Big Dick Wakefield, sensational Michigan sophomore, didn't exactly disappoint the host of big league scouts who were on hand to watch him perform either. Although he didn't duplicate his feat of the day before (when he clouted two very long home runs), the big fellow got two singles which were almost as impressive. , Both of them traveled like rifle shots over second base into center field and were labeled "safe" from the instant they left the bat. Be- sides, the lanky right-fielder has a way of looking good up at the plate even when he strikes out, which he seldom does. Dick had a pretty good excuse for failing to connect with any long ones Friday although he didn't use it. His pet black bat was broken in pre-game hitting practice and he had to be content to use an ordinary white one during the contest. Also deserving of a few paeans of praise for his work in Friday's tilt is Pitcher Cliff Wise who held the Purple hitters to four runs, two of whih were unearned. * * * There were so many .scouts in the stands Thursday that they came near outnumbering the rest of the fans . we stated that there were eight or nine but this estimate turned out to be low . . . 12 or 13 would be nearer correct . .two were waiting in the hotel lobby when the Wolver- ines arrived at 11:30 p.m. Wednes- day . . they hung around all day Thursday and Friday too. Majr League MtAndLgs AMiERICAN l.EAGE Netmen Score 16 Points As Gamon, Johnson Win Muir Pitches Baseball Team To 6-4 Win; Wakefield Hits Triple, Three Singles (Continued from Page 1) to Nosek in the fourth bracket cham- pionship. "Duke" won the first set 6-4, but lost the second, 7-5. The third set was closely contested with Nosek breaking through Stille's serves to win, 7-5. The only other Michigan players to reach the finals were the doubles team of Gerry Schaflander and Gain- on. In their final match with Johan- sen and Bob Martin of Chicago, the Wolverine duo took a 4-2 advantage (Continued from Page 1) mons' double scored one run for the Spartans in the second, but the Wol- verines retaliated with another tally in the third and this later proved to be the run that won the game. Once again it was Wakefield who made the big hit. Dick led off with a triple and scored on Chamber- lain's infield out. Just for safety's sake Michigan scored again in the seventh inning on successive singles by Steppon, Wakefield and Chamberlain. Michigan State's ninth inning rally almost prevented Muir from finish- ing the game but, after three runs had crossed the plate on triples by Bob Young and Casey Klewicki and singles by Will Davis and Fitzsim- mons, the big southpaw steadied and' retired the side on .a pop fly to Sofiak' and a strike-out. Box Score 1ichigan AB Nelson, cf .... Cartmill, cf .. 0 Holman, if .. 5 Steppon, 2b .. 5 Wakefield rf 5 Chamb'rl'n,3b 4 Ruehle, lb .. 3 Sofiak, ss .... 4 Harms, c .... 3 Muir, p ...... 4 Totals .......38 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 1 0 a 0 1 2 4 2 0 Y 0 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 11 3 6 0 0t 1 4 0 2 0 6 1 1 T rackinen Run Third To Yps In AAU Meet Detroit Policemen Second; Wolverine MeCarthy s Second Highest Scorer1 (Continued from Page 1) the bar at a height of 6 feet 42 inches and finish in a tie for first place. Pete Wege, star Wolverine freshman who was competing unattached, placed second in the javelin throw, with Johnny Wise finishing sixth in the same event. Newly-elected Capt. Al Piel, Michi- gan's ace sprinter, turned in double victories in the 100 yard dash and the 220, setting a new Michigan AAU mark of :21.4 seconds in the longer distance. Another of Coach Ches- ter Stackhouse's star freshmen, Lenny Alkon, gave indication that he will be accomplishing big things for the Wolverines next year, as he fin- ished second to Piel in the century and came in third in the 220. Breidenbach Beaten Michigan's smooth-riding half- mile ace, Warren Breidenbach, lived up to expectations, as he came in first in the 880, turning in a time of 1:57.7 seconds on the wet track. But the Wolverine flash, boxed in un- til the last turn in the 440 yard run, was nosed out by Michigan Normal's sensational freshman, Joe Matyunas, and finished second. The surprise of the afternoon came when Michigan's crack mile-relay team'went down in defeat to a long- stepping crew of baton-passers from Western State. Johnny Katz, who was running in place of Bob Ufer on the Wolverine team, led off for Michigan and was in third place when he handed the baton to Warren Breidenbach. Mile Relay Close Stepping out with his thorough- bred stride, Breidenbach quickly overtook and passed the leaders and gave the stick to Jack Leutritz, run- ning the third leg, with a three foot lead. Leutritz maintained this lead all the way around the track but Al Thomas, Michigan's anchor-man, was unable to keep up the hotpace set by Horace ,Coleman of Western State, and had to follow Coleman to the tape, losing the relay by about three feet. Trucks Pitches No-Hit Ball, Lose's In Tenth BUFFALO, N.Y., May 31. -(IP)- Virgil (Fire) Trucks, International League strikeout king, pitched no-hit, no-run ball for nine and two-thirds innings today but was charged with the loss as the league leading Mon- treal Royals nipped the Buffalo Bi- sons, 1-0, in 10 innings. The Royals seized on a wild throw by third baseman Bob Boen to break up the game. Trucks, who is owned by the De- troit Tigers, fanned 11 men for a record of 74 strikeouts in 70 innings. FORT WORTH, Tex., May 31.-A4) -Golfdom's greatest show, the 45th Open Championship, heads into Texas tomorrow. The Colonial Club will welcome the nation's best, a field of 172 qualifiers, to its green ad tree-studded 7035- yard, par 70 layout stretching along the arms and lagoons of the forked Trinity River. Title rounds start Thursday, but so great is golfing interest that the gate charge goes up tomorrow, and a 50,000 gallery figure is expected for the week. Betting row established Lawson Lit- h A GOOD 1. Joins a local Utniversity of Mich iga Club. There are 200 of these Clubs in all parts of the world. They have their social programs and they initiate activities for the benefit of their members, their communities and their University. 2. Concerns himself with his Class Og g anizgatio. - tle and Paul Runyan, winner of the Goodall Round Robin, as the men to beat. Little and Runyan were quoted as six to one, with Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson ranking as eight to one. The remainder of the field was offered at fifteen to one. Dean Woods, the golf architect who has been here a year putting in 56 new traps and remodeling old traps bordering the greens, says it ranks "in the upper bracket of golf courses of the country." Star Golfers T une Up For Open Grover Klemmer of the. U. of Calif., ran a 46.4 second 440-yard dash yes- terday to tie the world's record. LIFE INSURANCE NOW! When the cost is jow. when your health is good. Before war clauses are announced. See or call CLINTON E. PURDY agent for THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANE Co. 206 Wolverine Bldg. Tel. 9333 h 1 6 11 27 15 Every Alumni Class has its officers and its program. once every five years on the Campus. 3. Reads the Michigan Alumnus. A Reunion is held COACH WEIR ... Cops First Title in both sets, but couldn't hold onto it. Both Chicago men used hard fore- hand drives to offset the Michigan players' net game. The final score was 8-6, 7-5, in favor of the Chicagoans. Other division championships went to Walt Kemetick of Chicago in the second singles bracket who defeated Richards, 0-6, 6-0, 7-5; Harrie Hall of Northwestern who downed Geanekop- lis, 8-6, 6-2; and Jerry Rosenthal and John Lewis of Ohio State who whipped Kemetick and Bill Self, 6-10, 10-8. Michigan had two'casualties on Fri- day. Jim Porter fell victim to Geane- koplis' strokes, 6-4, 6-1 and the sec- ond doubles team of Porter and Stille lost a three set heart-breaker to Kemetick and Self, 2-6, 9-7, 7-5. Rice Beats Schwarzkopf Ralph Schwarzkopf, ex-Michigan track captain, waged a thrilling duel with Greg Rice in a special exhibi- tion two-mile run at the 65th I.C.A.- A.A.A. championships in New York yesterday, only to finish second, 10 yards behind the great Greg. Mich. State Duncan, ss,. Pellerin, 2b . . Wy Davis, if Klewicki, 3b Jakubowski, rf Wil Davis, rf Fitzsim'ns, cf Young,1b .. Bolster, c . Skrocki, p .. . Walkowkicz, x Jones, p .,. .. A .% AB R 4 0 3 0 4 0 4 1 2 0 2 1 4 2 4 0 4 0 2 0. 1 0 1 0 H 2 0 0 2 0 1 2 1 2 0 0 U 2 3 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 A 3 2 0 5 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 The magazine is issued 26 times each year and is the chief liaison agency between the University and its Alumni. 4. Remembers always that he is A Michlian Man. Totals ......35 x - batted for 4 10 Skrocki 27 13 in 8th. SCORE BY INNINGS Michigan...... 041 000 100--6I Mich. State ... 010 000 003 - 4 Two base hits - Fitzsimmons 2. Three base hits - Wakefield, Young, Klewicki. Runs batted in - Chamber- lin 2, Holman, Sofiak, Muir, Young 3, Will Davis. Errors - Chamberlain, Ruehle, Pellerin. Stolen base -Wake- field. Sacrifice - Pellerin. Double play - Steppon, Sofiak and Ruehle. Left on bases '- Michigan 7; State 5. Bases on balls - off Skrocki 2. Struck out - by Muir 4, by Skrocki 4, by Jones 1. i 1 ALUMNI HEADQUARTERS ANN ARBOR - MICH IGAN Alumni Memorial H all ..r _ ._, _ ._. -.__. - I W L Cleveland... . .. ..29 17 Chicago ... .. ,.25 16 New York ....23 19 Detroit ........23 2, Philadelphia... 21 21 Boston.........19 19 Washington .,. . 14 28 St. Louis........ 13 27 *ct. .652 .610 .548 .535 .500 .500 .333 .325 GB 1% 4 4% 6 6 13 13 Saturday's Resurlts Chicago 4, St. Louis 3 Boston at Detroit (wet grounds) New York at Cleveland (rain) Only Games Scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE W St. Louis........ 31 Braooklyn.... ,. ...30 N ew York ,... ...27 Chicago........17 Cincinnati.......19 Pittsburgh. ....14 Boston........13 Philadelphia ... 12 L 11 12 17 21 23 21 24 27 Pet. .737 .714 .54 . .447 .452 .400 .351 .308 GB % 8'I 12 12 131/ 15/2 17% MOE'S FAMOUS SWIM SUITS ore built for comfort and freedom. Good looking, all wool, and pre-srunk, they are aail- able in all colors. Before you buy see Moe's line. 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