TT DYMY.0,144TH MCtANTaTY -. .. a... a a ..r 4a ..* t .. .a " 5 " i s 111 i lf Z 1 1 Sl 1'-L 1! 1l !Y 1 L J, l P L9 L T 1 rV Michigan Net Squad Noses Out Ohio State, L8-17 Tennis Team Annexes * s Big Ten Championship Post, LewIs, Gulic Win SIngles Crowns; Guili and Roy Boucher Triumph in Doubles Clinching three singles crowns as well as one doubles title, Michigan's net squad, playing off the Big Ten finals in Chicago, last week-end also walked off with team honors, nar- rowly defeating a well-balanced Ohio State squad, 18-17. At the end of the first day of play Michigan trailed Ohio State by two points, as the Buckeye netters quali- fied five men in singles competition, while all three of the Ohio State doubles teams as well as all three of the Maize and Blue squads were still undefeated. Michigan was able to amass only eight points in singles competition as Jinx Johnson, Jim Frolik and Bill Ford were all beaten in early rounds. Three Varsity Players in Finals This loft m rrf~~a r ln. difficulty with his highly-touted op- ponent and polished him off, 6-2, 6-1. Two Ohio State players did capture crowns, Tom Mitchell easily grab-1 bing the number two singles title from Harry Tully of Chicago, 6-0, 6-2, while diminutive Jose Coriat managed to eke out a victory over Frank Clawson of Northwestern, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5. Two Doubles Matches Played Both the semi-finals and finals in the doubles competition were played the second day, and entering the final round Michigan's number two doubles team of Frolik and Lewis, as well as the number three team icom- prised of Gulic and Boucher, were still undefeated. Frolik and Lewis went down before the onslaughts of the Northwestern .ers ±er number three man Meieri second team of .ArtIM Gulic; Roger Lewis, playing in the Roper, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 fifth spot; and Dave Post, in sixth trounced Michigan the position. They were the only Michi- fore and was heavily f gan men to enter the final round, the title. while Ohio State had Tom Mitchell, Gulic-Boucher Win Alex Franklin, Jose Coriat, Bob Bow- Playing the last r en and Dave Krenzli still eligible, meet, Merle Gulic and In the finals Gulic came from be- captured Michigan's hind to defeat Franklin, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2. crown, 6-1, 7-5, havin Franklin showed a sizzling brand of culty out-pointing Fr play in the first set but tired after and Bob Hobart of No that, and the steady, consistent Gulic The number one sing easily took the remaining sets, taken by Ted Park of Lewis Wins ' - comparative dark hor Likewise, Roger Lewis, playing a- over Walter Lum of Pu gainst Bob Bowen of Ohio State, took 6-3, in one of the tight the count of the Buckeye star, 6-0, liant matches of the mr G-3, in one of the easiest matches of Ohio State's first do the afternoon. Aris Franklin and T Dave Post, who met Dave Krenzli managed to gain toap of Ohio State in the finals in what division by defeating was supposed to be one of the closest and Wallis Andersonc matches of the entire meet, had little 4-6, 6-3, 6-4. Meyerhand Bill 1.This team week-end be- favored to win match of the * Roy Boucher only doubles ng 'little diffi- 'rank Clawson rthwestern., gles crown was f Wisconsin, a rse, who won rdue, 7-5, 5-7, est, most bril- neet. ubles team of Tom Mitchell honors in that Jack ,Adams of Minnesota, ANOTHER FOR THE TWINS--Rounding a curve in the Big Ten out- door track meet held at Champaign, Ill., Saturday, Ross and Bob Hume lead the pack. The twins crossed the finish line together to win the race in a dead heat. FINE TEAM BALANCE: Hume Boys Star as Thinclads Take Seventh Title in Decade ,:,________ Sinksmen Win Thid B' Ten Title in Row Jenswold Is Medallist As Golfers Take Title By 27-Stroke Margin By RUTH ELCONIN Living up to expectations, the Wol- verine linksmen captured their third successive Big Ten golf crown May 27 at Chicago. The big surprise of the tournament was Johnny Jenswold's winning of the individual championship with a score of 72. Jenswold had been play- ing fair golf during the season and his top mark was against Detroit May 20, when he carded a 74 which made him top man for both teams. He came to Michigan last July in the V-12 unit, and had previously attended Detroit Tech. At Detroit Tech he occupied a position on the hockey team, and during the past season played on the Michigan sex- 'tet. Marcellus Is Runner-Up Phil Marcellus, captain of the Wol- verine linksmen, and Jack Culp of Purdue tied for second place by post- ing 155's, but Marcellus won a coin toss for the runner-up medal. Mar- cellus had a slow start this year, as in past seasons, but he began to hit his normal pace when the linksters has been maintaining a fast clip encountered Ohio State May 13, and since then. Jim Harris of Minnesota, who was on Yale's championship team last season, took third place in the indi- vidual playoffs .when he carded a 78. Tews Is Consistent .The other members of the cham- pionship team, John Tews, Tom Mes- singer and Paul O'Hara, all played top golf and were in rare form to aid their teammates in copping Michi- gan's eighth Conference title. Of the trio, Tews shot the best score with a 156 for the match. He was followed by Messinger who carded a 159, while O'Hara's mark for the afternoon was 160. Tews has been the most consistent player on the squad, shooting in the 70's all season, and it was mainly due to him that the golfers beat Ohio State here after suffering a 12-6 de- feat at Columbus. During the eight match schedule, Messinger and O'- Hara's scores ranged in the high 70's and low 80's. Michigan Beats Out Purdue Pacing a field of eight schools, Michigan won the team title with a 623, and the second place team, Pur- due, had & score of 650. Third spot went to Minnesota as the Gophers carded 653. Ohio State followed with 654, while Wisconsin's 664 gave them fifth place. Northwestern and Illinois were sixth and seventh respectively with marks of 667 and 669. Indiana was represented by only two men, and the Hoosiers could not therefore com- pete for the team title. Iowa and Chicago were not entrants. The match against the University of Detroit May 20 closed the Wol- verine's 1944 golf schedule with the record standing at six victories a- gainst two defeats, suffered at the hands of Notre Dame and Ohio State. LOWdown on Sports A.sci.eSpotsEdto TURN BACK the pages to June 2, 1923. The strains of "The Victors" could be heard throughout the land, for on that day Michigan won her fifth and sixth Conference championships of the years. Steve Farrell's trackmen captured the meet with 57%1 points to the Illini's 57, while the baseball team, which had won 11 Big Ten tilts, automatically took the crown as its last game with Wisconsin was rained out. Previously the Wolverines had garnered the Big Ten title in foot- ball, cross country, indoor track and tennis. Five of these teams boasted unblemished records in Conference comuetition, while' the sixth, out- door track, had only a dual meet loss to Illinois to mar its record. That year the basketball and hockey teams finished in the runnerup spot, while the swimmers (Matt Mann had not yet arrived on the scene) finished in sixth place. This past week-end Maize and Blue squads on three fronts came through with three Conference titles, while the fourth team, baseball, swarmed all over Indiana in a two-game series to remain undefeated in Big Ten competition. In its quest to regain the crown they lost to Ohio State last year, the nine is now a game ahead of second place Minnesota whose won-lost record is 6 to 1. The track, tepnis and golf teams all came out on top in the meets this last week-end, but only the later squad had an easy time of it. Coach Ray Courtright's golfers finished 27 strokes ahead of runnerup Minnesota as Johnny Jenswold took medalist honors with a 36-hole total of 153. Captain Phil Marcellus tied for second with a 155 card, while number one man John Tews posted a 156. T HE THINCLADS rolled up 70 points to take the track meet from Illinois, whose second place total of 58 1 10 was far too short. It was team bal- ance against individual stars as the Wolverines spread-eagled the field by placing 22 men in all but one of the 14 events on the program. Michigan failed to place in the 440 as Bob Ufer, indoor quarter-mile champ, could not compete because of a leg injury incurred last week. Ufer was on the sidelines, however, cheering his mates on to ultimate victory. It must have seemed peculiar to the "Hose" to be forced to sit by and not be able to compete, but the old do-or-die spirit was still there and Bob's words of praise and encouragement did a lot for the morale of the team. With ten minutes to go before the half mile, Ken Doherty looked at his "dope sheet" and saw that the Wolverines were eight points behind, figuring wlaat hid already happened and what was probably going to happen. He ran into the training room and summoned Captain Bob Hume. "Get out there and warm tip," he told the congenial leader. Bob got on the track with only six minutes to go. As Doherty was about to ask Hume to run because the Varsity needed every extra point, the iron man of the team volunteered to run the half., He then proceeded to take not only a second behind fleet-footed Bob Kelley, but to also help pull Dick Barnard and George Vetter along. It is just this sort of leadership that has enabled the Wolverine trackmen to finish the season unbeaten. Two Changes Proposed at NCAA NEW YORK, May 29.-(/P)--College fooball coaches voted unanimous disapproval of the intentional out-of-bounds kickoff late today and sent a recommendation to Lt. Col. William Gingham of Harvard, chairman of the NCAA rules committee, that his group meet as early as possible to consider two changes in the playing code. The first suggested rule change would put the ball in play following an out-of-bounds kickoff on the receiving teams' 45-yard line instead of on the 35. Use of a one-inch tee at the kickoff also was suggested. Double Victory over Hoosiers 13rings Nine Closer to Crown Led 1 betweer pointsa of six a igan ti victory seventh Michigan's baseball team moved two notches closer to the Western Conference championship Saturday by taking both ends of a double- header from a surprisingly weak In- diana nine, 14-3 and 12-1. With only two Big Ten contests remaining the Wolverines have an excellent chance to become the eighth Michigan squadto bringra Confer- ence crown to Ann Arbor this sea- son. The two games still to be played are scheduled for July 10 here in a twin-bill with a strong Purdue club. Coach Ray Fisher's squad had a field day at Bloomington, pounding FOR SALE SMALL used portable typewriter. For information call 24143. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING: thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. WANTED URGENT! Wanted to buy or rent- Acro camera. Name your price. Ruth Gerber, 597 Jordan. LOST AND FOUND LOST-Friday in Haven Hall or Li- brary, red wallet containing money, driver's license, ident. card, and other valuable papers. Reward. Phone 24143. LOST -Alpha Omicron Pi sorority pin. Please return to owner, Pat Swanson. Reward! Phone 2-2281. BLACK change purse in front of 726 Oakland. Reward. Call 21513. ONE BLUE looseleaf notebook, per- sonal importance. Reward. Please return to Barbara Alig, Martha Cook Bldg. LOST-Slide-rule Monday afternoon in 206 Mason Hall. Contact Box 13, Michigan Daily. Reward. LOST - Crawford watch, Michigan . Union, Tuesday. High personal value. Reward. Howard Cole, 21642. out 30 hits in the two contests while track cx Michigan pitchers, Bo Bowman and Stand Elroy Hirsch wereholding the Hoo.. from th siers to nine. Included among the Illionis' barrage were three homers, two by three f Don Lund and one by Elmer Swan- man B son; and triples by Elroy Hirsch, who tui Bruce Blanchard and Charlie Ket- of the d terer. and tw Michigan went into the game look- space o ing for a hard battle against a scrap- Bobr py freshman outfit which only the place w week before had upset a highly-rated and 60 Purdue nine and just missed turning in the the trick twice. However, the Hoo- ne sier pitcher Kermit Wahl and GeneOrange Seifert, were no match for the Maize quarter and Blue sluggers, a 1:54 Neither Bowman nor Hirsch was 25-mina. forced to extend himself at any stagemile. t as their teammates handed them miladd ample leads in the early frames. Bow-t.ad man missed a shutout when the Hoo- point to siers rallied to tally three runs in The- the eighth on a pair of hits and two twins w errors. Indiana got its lone marker the rul off Hirsch's delivery in the sixth. balance Michigan's next foe is Notre Dame, the titl a team which the Wolverines trim- 24 men med twice earlier in the season. The 12 of th Irish ran into a losing streak after times ai the first Michigan series but have just a s since hit the victory trail again and ols int will be out for revenge. The two con- clocked tests will be played Friday and Sat- of the y urday at South Bend. In th DAILY OFFICIAL (Continued from Page 2) for all Rackham Amphitheatre at 8 o'clock, don't ca Tuesday, June 6. The initiation will other ts be followed by a reception in the dance s Assembly Hall. All members are in- Form vited to attend. againr Crayon Drawings: For a perfect There likeness of yourself, come to the USO cHg, a and have a drawing made by Mrs. who wa John Bradfield. It's colored and it's darn neat. Make an appointment for any hour from 1 to 5 on Friday after- noon. Dancing Class: On June 2 the be- ginners class will begin under the expert direction of Lt. Flegal. A series of six lessons are given and you'll know how to dance when you're through. Time: 7 to 8 p.m. Friday Night Fun: Once more the I USO puts on a Friday night dance I1 By BUD LOWE by Bob and Ross Hume, who n them collected a total of 21 and ran an aggregate distance and one-half miles, the Mich- rack team scored a decisive over Illinois to capture their Western Conference outdoor rown in the last ten years. dout performer of the meet e spectator's point of view was 'Buddy Young, who garnered irsts. However, it was iron ob Hume, Wolverine leader, rned in the most amazing feat day when he ran the mile, 880 o-mile distances all within the f an hour and a half. ran a dead-heat tie for first ith brother Ross in the mile, minutes later doubled back half to push Bob Kelley, and Black star who won the in addition to the 880, to performance. With only a ute rest, Captain Bob tripled ! Scapture a third in the two- Ross took the two mile in 9:56 five more points to his 9/2- tal. performances of the Hume 'as the exception rather than e, however, as it was team and not individuals that won e for the Wolverines. Of the who competed, 22 placed; and hese men turned in their best nd distances. John Eisley was tep behind winner Dave Nic- the high hurdles as he was in :15.1, by far his best time year. he low hurdles Jack Martin servicemen to enjoy. If you are to dance, there are a lot of hings to do down here. The tarts at 8 p.m. al Fun: The USO does it with another formal dance! will be an orchestra for dan- nd it's a' good one. Junior es, orchestra, refreshments- nts more? was the victor when Buddy Young, trying for his fourth title, fell flat on his face five yards from the tape. Martin ran :24.5 in water that com- pletely covered the track for what was undoubtedly his best race of the sea- In finishing fourth in the 880, George Vetter ran 1:57.6, by far his best effort of the year. Seeing Vet- ter place fourth in such excellent time probably pleased Coach Ken Doherty as much as anything else that occurred at the meet. Dick Barnard, who was doubling back after grabbing a fourth in the mile, finished just ahead of Vetter in the half. Barnard's 1:55.9 was ex- ceptionally good considering he had done a' 4:28.4 mile only one hour, earlier. PLAYER G AR3 H Pct. Manko'...........2 3 2 .667 Nussbaumrer ......12 31 ' 13 .419 Blanchard........4 56 23 .411 Hirsch...........5 16 6 .375 Gregor..........13 50 17 .340 Phelps...........5 3 1 .333 Kell .............4 3 1 .333, Lund ............14 46 15 .326 Swanson .........14 46 13 .283 Farnyk ..........14 53 14 .264 Wiese ............10 23 6 .261 Schmidtke ........2 4 1 .250 Bowan ......... 6 18 4 .222 Ketterer.........14 50 10 .200 Stevenson ........14 49 7 .143 Nelson ...........1 2 0 .000 Hackstadt ........ 1 1 0 .000 Team Average . .14 453 136 .300 Office and Portable Models of all makes == 'Bought, '. ,-. ii Rented, Repaired STATION E RY & SUPP LIES 0. D. MORRJIILL 314 South State St. I Fa-r I N DIV I DUA L IZE D FU21 STORAGE 217 East L iber ty St. I i Continuaus fromr 1 P.M. COOL! r_ WAR BONDS ISSUED HIERE ! --LAST TIMES TODAY -- ~E. YYA ~, .4 "we-