THE MICHIGAN DAILY v I I I i m~an9 the teoun 44 By HANK MANTHO Dily Sports Editor AS THE professional golfers came off the winter circuit and began to lay their plans for the summer, many reports arose as to who was the great- est golfer of all time, and the biggest percentage of yeas gave this classi- fication to Byron Nelson. The only other golfer to appear as an opponent worthy of the title was Bobby Jones, but even the Jones admirers who saw Bobby in his first and last National Open and most of the championships he played in between, claimed that Jones could never have matched the 263 by which Nelson won the tournament in Atlanta. Older golf partisans maintain that Harry Vardon, British professional, and Walter Hagen; known for his competitive nature, were both the super- iors of Nelson, but from reports of scribes who have seen all three men play and judged their talents objectively, neither of the two old-timers was tougher than Nelson was across the winter circuit. A UNITED PRESS release out of Atlanta said that Nelson's 263 set an all-time tournament record, although George Duncan of England managed to post a score under 260 in 1913 in the Swiss Open, which score still stands as the official tournament record. Nelson's play at Atlanta amounted to 65 3/4 strokes a round or about 3.6 strokes per hole. This type of golf should not be allowed since it is very discouraging to the average pro golfer and may even- tually ruin the professional game. Nelson's scoring average for the season was the best ever compiled and he was never out of the running in any of the events that he decided to enter. Sammy Snead and 'Jug' McSpaden are the only linksters capable of offering Byron any competition whatsoever, and though they are as adept at certain shots as Nelson, there is no one who can weave a skein of shots so consistently as Nelson. Nelson will again go into action this month at the Calumet Country Club, when the maestro will be vieing for honors in the third playing of the Chicago Victory National Open championship. Big Ten Honors Wiese Bowmart, Kell Lead Michigan Nine Batting3 Wolver Ii es ILive Won .19 Str li t Vict e rie o*I Three (iglies Lemain Entering the final week of the 1945 bas;eball season with encounters against a Grosse Ile Naval squad and the Ohio State Buckeyes Thursday and Saturday, Pitcher Bo Bowman and third baseman Wait Kell are leading the Conference champions at the plate with marks of .423 and .363 respectively. Kell, stellar performer at the third sack, has the more noteworthy aver- age due to the greater number of1 times at hat, but Bowman passing from the bottom of the list to the top has done more than expected for a pitcher, and has also won six games on the mound for Coach Ray Fisher. The team as a group has also im- proved greatly at the plate, as Bob Stevenson, Bill Gregor, Don Lund, Jack Weisenburger, and Dom Tomasi have advanced from the low two hundreds nearer the coveted goal of1 .300, with Stevenson passing that mark. Opposing pitchers have had to duck a great many times in the past few tilts, for the Wolverines have shown no mercy by banging out 86 blows -in six games. Ray Louthen, running his winning streak to eight games, and Bowman clinched the Big Ten title for the Michigan squad with their double victory over Purdue last Saturday and both will be striving to annex the remaining games which would give the Wolverines 22 victories against one defeat for the season. While running up their present 19 consecutive wins the team has amassed 181 bingles in 670 times at bat and has driven 130 runs across the plate for a team average of .289. While this is some 13 points below the mark of .302 hung up by last year's championship nine, it repre- sents a steady climb from a weak early season start. Michigan's hitting in recent games recently lead Coach Fisher to call the 1945 club "the best hitting team I've ever had." Naval Aeadevmy Squad Favored In NCAA Meet Bob Wiese, who captained last fall's Wolyerine football squad until he was transferred from the campus V-121 unit after playing in six games, has been awarded the Western Confer- ence medal for proficiency in schol- arship and in athletics during 1944. Now a midshipman at Annapolis, Wiese was a three-sport man at. the, university, winning varsity letters in football, basketball, and baseball. When Bill Daley, All American full-l back in 1943. was transferred to the University, Wiese unprotestingly switched from his fullback role to quarterback, but went back to full- back when Daley left. Last year, the Jamestown, N. D., athlete was select- ed for the all-Conference squad. Wiese was a reserve forward in basketball and led the Conference in hitting dui'ing the baseball season with an average well over .400. He also starred in the field for the Mich- igan nine; playing in the outfield dur- ing two seasons and alternating on the mound last spring. olriseacin A oaiLegralized unt Miuhgmiby ocurt .decision RETURNED-Navy Lieut. Jack Brennan, guard on the 1939 Michi- gan football squad, has returned! to Ann Arbor after seeing action in the South Pacific. Brennan's rel- atives received a scare when his picture was included in a story published by a Detroit newspaper in connection with the death of another Jack Brennan. The for- mer Michigan athlete, however, has not even been scratched in combat. Pirates Spoil Reds' Spree With 9-1l Win NEW YORK. June 5-(I)--Cincin- nati's nine-game winning streak went up in smoke today as the Pittsburgh Pirates clubbed out a 9-1 edge over the Redlegs in the second game of a doubleheader after bowing in the opener, 4-0. Max Butcher halted the Cincinnati splurge with a neat seven-hitter as the Pirates slugged Walter (Boom Boom) Beck and three successors for a total of 13 safeties. Ed Heusser blanked Pittsburgh in the first game with seven blows and hit a home run in the fifth inning to help make it stick. It was Heus- ser's fifth triumph and his second whitewash job on the Buccos who have scored only one run on the vet- eran in 27 innings. A twi-night doubleheader in Phil- adelphia with the Boston Braves was washed out ° as was a single night game between Chicago and St. Louis at Sportsman's Park. Only day action scheduled in the American, Philadelphia at Boston, was postponed by rain, making a doubleheader tomorrow. Cincinnati . .000 110 002- 4 10 1E Pittsburgh ..000 000 000- 0 7 0 Heusser & Riddle; Strincevich & Lopez. Cincinnati . . 000 001 000- 1 7 1 Pittsburgh . .002 322 00x- 9 13 0 Beck, Fox, Bosser, Lisenbee & Lakeman, Riddle; Butcher & Lo- pez. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Teuim To Seek Sitigle 11olos 1108;iies To 111111 By BILL MULLENDORCE With hopes for a team title blast- ed by the size and strength of a pow- erful 20-man U. S. Naval Academy squad, Michigan's seven-man cinder; contingent selected by Coach Doh- erty to represent the University at the annual NCAA Track and Field meet Saturday at Milwaukee will be gun- ning for individual honors and a chance to beat out Illinois' Confer- ence champions for secondi money. The Wolverines' main hopes for first places center around Bob and Ross Hume, defending co-titlists in the mile, who are expected to be able to compete Saturday despite medical school requirements. Other Michigan entrants include distance men Archie Parsons, Bob Thomason, and Charles Birdsall, quarter-miler Dick Forrestal, and high jumper John McNab. Coach Doherty said that he did not plan to use the Humes in more than one event, but indicated that he might run each in separate races. Bob will probably go in the mile, along with Thomason, while Ross is tentatively slated for the half mile, where Parsons is also among the en- trants. Birdsall, Big Ten two-mile champ, will run in his specialty, and Forres-, tal is a definite starter in the 440. McNab, if he makes the trip, will compete against a strong field in the high jump. Navy, boasting one of the nation's strongest squads, is expected to have little trouble winning the meet on the basis of numbers alone. The 20- man Middie sqUad is almost three times the size of the next largest en- try. Illinois, by virtue of its triumph over the Wolverines in the Confer- ence outdoor clash, has been install- ed as second place favorite. The Il- lini also have a seven-man group ready to go, but will be minus the services of Bob Kelley, Big Ten champ in the 440 and 880, who is not eligible for another year of com- petition under NCAA rules. lBating Averages The high notes of this two-piece Ellen Kaye dress are its young, young lines and softly scalloped detils. Look how it whittles your waist,.how smoothly it fits and flatters, Designed in Tegra, a spun rayon tropical type fabric by Labtex. Sizes 7 to 15. 1991 COLLINS. y rhe Associated Press DETROIT, June 5 - - :Horse racing in Michigan received a go ahead siiv igl today fromClio the t Sullernu Cour 'Iwo tracks jimnedia tel y' :w g into action as soon as the announce- myent was issued on the court's decision to permit a resumption of horse racing. Trotting events at Northville Downs, near Detroit, will begin tomot- row night with a nine race card. The harness races will continue through July 4. The Detroit Racing Association announced an 85-day meeting from June 16 to Sept. 22. General Manager George Lewis said he expected approximately 900 horses for the opening day at the Fairgrounds. The State Supreme Court at Lansing issued a stay on an injunction by Circuit Judge Guy L. Miller, prohibiting horse racing and pari- mutuel betting. .. A FROM OUR -TOWN AND COUNTRY SHOP 7- o " O4 A,.' Begin with: The suit, in brown gabar- dine at 39.95. Add: The lovely rayon jersey polka-dot blouse at 8.95. Suabtract: The skirt . . Add: A pair of traditionally tailored slacks at 14.95. Result One basic outfit that af- fords many quick changes <, by adding or subtracting. SUITS in Brown, Rose, Navy and Powder Blue. BLOUSES, Brown, Red, Grey. Bowman Kell ... Soboleski Stevensor Rosema Gregor . Lund ... Weisenbu Tomasi Nelson Lou then AB .. . ..26 .........20 . . . .. . .. . 9 n .........71 . 67 ..... 79 irger . . . .87 .........74 R 5 20 5 15 16 16 15 10 12 12 4 H 11 29 22 20 23 22 23 17 16 5 TEAM .........660 130 191 .289 Alexis in Derby Field LOUISVILLE, June 5-UP)-Alexis, half of the one-two punch the East expects to land in Saturday's Ken- tucky Derby, took over at Churchill Downs today when he joined some 15 other three-year olds prepping for the $75,000 mile and one-quarter race. Three lightly regarded Canadian horses, H. C. Hatch's Fair Jester and Kenilworth Lad and Pert G. from T. C. Graham's Kenilworth Farm, also put in their appearance. Pet. .423 .363 .333 .310 .299 .291 .283 .264 .246 .216 .167 TEAMS New York .... Detroit ...... St. Louis ..... Chicago ...... Boston ....... Cleveland Washington Philadelphia W L ..24 15 ..20 15 ..18 17 ...19 18 ....19 20 ....16 19 ....17 21 ....15 23 Pet. .615 .571 .514 .514 .487 .457 .447 .375 GB 2 4 4 5 6 6 8/ 0 0 * Pil,,I,. at Mfaynzard i .3, __ __I t IW YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit at Cleveland, night. Philadelphia at Boston, rain. St. Louis at Chicago, night. New York at Washington, night. TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Cleveland. St. Louis at Chicago. Philadelphia at Boston (2). New York at Washington, night. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York .......27 14 .659 . Pittsburgh ......23 17 .575 4 St. Louis ........23 18 .561 4 Brooklyn ........21 19 .525 5?% Chicago ........19 18 .514 6 Cincinnati ......19 19 .500 61/ Boston ..........15 21 .4117 92 Philadelphia ....10 31 .244 17 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cincinnati 4-1, Pittsburgh 0-9. Chicago at St. Louis, rain. Boston at Philadelphia, rain. Boston at Philadelphia, rain. Brooklyn at New York, incom- plete. TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Philadelphia, twilight- night. Chicago at St. Louis, night. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, night. j}~i 4 CeU Pf lIND ' . H EE L addk e Connie's sp t for a repea repeat succ white leathe rubber sole 'mkand tied wi orts headliner is back t performance,, and ess'... it's brown and er... with "no-mark" s and spring heel.. ith heavy cord laces. C 5.95 .. N T f: Gwtlxlol I I -U,