1847 THE MICHIGAN DAILY iseball, Tennis Squads Win Close Nine Clips Western, 2-1 In Tight Pitching Battle Dole Hurls Shutout Ball for Five Innings To Stretch Total to 27 Scoreless Frames Paced through the first five in- ningsby more brilliant shoutout pitching from rookie Art Dole. Michigan's baseball team squeezed out its second narrow victory of the season over Western Michigan, 2-1, in a game played at Kalama- zoo, yesterday. The big young righthander al- lowed the Broncos only three hits and issued but one pass as he ran his scoreless inning streak to 27. Dole didn't allow a'single Bronco to reach second base. Michigan Takes Lead The Wolverines took a one run lead in the second inning as Jack Weisenburger reached first on the third baseman's error and went to second when the left fielder threw wild. Charlie Ketterer then layed down a bunt which catcher Young fumbled and runners were safe on first and third. Big Bob Wiese stepped up and drove Weis- enburger home with a ground sin- gle over second on which Bronco keystoner, Tersilligerm made a brilliant stop. In the eighth Michigan pushed across what proved to be the win- ning run. Vieth singled and went to third on Bump Elliott's hit and run single. Bronco pitcher Ed Rossi then walked Weisenburger to fill the bases before a long fly to center by Dom Tomasi scored Vieth to give the Wolverines a 2-0 lead. Broncos Threaten The Bronco's threatened relief hurler Bud Rankin in their half of the eighth as Davis lined a long Derleth Signs Bob Derleth, 230-pound tac- kle, signed a contract with the j etroit Lions of the National Football League for the 1947 season. The 25-year old lineman let- tered four years at Michigan and played in 1944 with the Iowa Seahawks. triple and tallied a moment later on Groggel's single. But that was the extent, of Western's offensive for the day as Rankin permitted only one other hit in his four in- ning stint. Michigan's too often erratic in- field was on its best behavior as it executed three snappy double plays while playing errorless ball. Elliott and Wiese lead the nine hit batting barrage for the Maize and Blue each contributing two singles in four attempts. MICHIGAN .... 0101 WESTERN .......000 ** * 000 010-2 000 010-1 MICHIGAN Vieth, if Elliott, cf Wikel, lb Weisenburger, Tom i, 2b Kett rer, 3b Wiese, rf Kulpinski, c Dole, p Rankin, p (6) TOTALS * - WEST. MICH. Pollard, cf Throop, rf Terwilliger, 2b Young c Coss, lb Davis, ss Groggel, 3b Compton, lf Rossi, p TOTALS AB R 11 5 1 1 4 0 2 4 0 0 ss 3 1 1 4 0 0 3 0 1 4 0 2 4 0 0 2 0 1 S2 0 1 3529 *4*0 0 4 0 13 3 3 0 3 1 0 0 27 0 3 2 2 3 13 1 1 2 0 27 A E 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 3 0 3 0 0 0 10 1 0 1 0 14 0 Detroit Host To Michigan Golf Team Michigan's golf team is expected to encounter no trouble returning to the victory trail this afternoon when they tee off at the Univer- sity of Detroit course. A strong Purdue squad brought an end to a Maize and Blue seven- game winning streak Saturday at Lafayette, but Detroit proved no test to the Wolverines in a battle here two weeks ago. Michigan knocked the Titans into oblivion with a 35-1 score, their most de- cisive victory of the year. After today's match, the Wol- verines will play host to Ohio State Saturday in their last taste of regularly-scheduled dual com- petition. The Big Nine meet will be reeled off at Purdue May 30-31. Coach B e r t Katzenmeyer's charges invade the Detroit links with an impressive 11-4 record. Teeing off for the Wolverines this afternoon will be John Jenswold, Rog Kessler, Pete Elliott, Jack Vezina and two others to be se- lected from Captain Dave Barclay, Ed Scalon, Bill Courtright, Gary De Vries, Paul O'Hara, Bill Lu- dolph, and Tom Messinger. Dobson, 0Boston Beat Detroit, $-3 BOSTON, May 20 -(P)- The American League champion Red Sox today climbed within one game of the pace setting Tigers by defeating the Detroiters, 8-3, be- hind Joe Dobson, who had little difficulty from the second to the ninth. The Sox scored seven of their runs in less than three innings. off.starter Paul (Dizzy) Trout, who was the victim of poor support in a couple of instances. Ted Williams, the Boston strong boy, blasted out his tenth home run of the season off reliefer John Gorsica. AD R; 30 3 0 4 0 4 0 3 0 3 1 3 0 3 0 3 0 29 1 Michigan Nesters SIua Kalamazoo College, 11 0 0 0 0 2 Q 1 0 5 l 2 A 0 0 3 2 0 3 2 0 1 11 E 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 3 Special To The Daily With only a few exceptions Michigan's tennis team stuck to the script it wrote in the pre-sea- son exhibition match with Kala- mazoo College, last March, win- ning a 5-4 victory over the Hor- nets yesterday at Stowe Stadium, in Kalamazoo. Andy Paton made his earlier win over Kalamazoo's Jack Sunderland stick, but he had a little tougher time of it winning two overtime sets, 8-6, 8-6, in the number one single. In the number two singles Fred Otto couldn't quite dupli- cate his earlier victory over Al Hetzek, National Junior Indoor' doubles champ. Hetzek copped a tough three setter, 7-5, 3-6, 6-2. Ziemann Wins Fred Ziemann erased a black mark on his record by defeating Nick Barasky with ease, 6-1, 6-2. Major League Roundup By The Associated Press Scoring twice in the eighth in- ning with the aid of two doubles and three walks, the Cleveland Indians broke a 2-2 tie and went on to defeat the New York Yan- kees, 4-2, today to sweep their three game series from the Yanks. Ed Robinson's eighth inning double enabled Cleveland to down New York today, 4-2, for a clean sweep of the three-game series with the Yankees. Hammerin" Hank Greenberg singled home the winning run in the tenth inning tonight as the Pittsburgh Pirates edged the Bos- ton Braves, 4 to 3. The Chicago White Sox over- came a 4-run deficit and mauled Washington's pitchers for 15 hits to defeat the Senators, 7-4, here tonight and sweep a 4-game series.. Lonnie Frey cracked a pinch sin- gle to center with the bases loaded in the 11th inning to give the Chi- cago Cubs a 3-2 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies here today. The St. Louis Browns scored their first victory of the season over the Philadelphia Athleticsto- day, chalking up three runs in the first inning and then coasting to a 11-1 triumph behind the four- hit pitching of Bob Muncrief. The New York Giants combed four Cincinnati pitchers for 15 hits to defeat the Reds 9-1 and take over first place in the Na- tional League for the first time this season. Clint Hartung scat- tered eight Redleg hits for his sec- ond victory against no defeats. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Beresky had beaten Zie straight sets last March. kulich's seven game winni was snapped by Art Leigh stopped the Wolverine 4-6, 9-7. 6-1. Bob Stowe. the Horne son, met Dick Lincoln int ber five singles match. Li placed Gordy Naugle who lined by a foot injury, sx Stowe, 6-1, 7-5. Cook-Lincoln Clinch Vie Hal Cook continued t some of the most impro on the squad, as he dis Mary Mantin, without the single game, 6-0, 6-0. N lefthander, started thes number four for Kalama Cook and Lincoln team the doubles to clinch the bumping Stowe and Coo] 6-4. Kalamazoo went on to next two doubles matches the final score 5-4. Paton dropped two 7-5 sets to H Sunderland, while Leigh Beresky were edging past and Mikulich, 0-6, 8-6, 6- Paton and Sunderland brilliant duel in the match, both boys holdin Decisions ide ZBT LAses to 4 Sigma Chi in Seiii-JFinaI T il Imann in Bill Mi- After a two-hour long six-inn- ng streak ing game. Sigma Chi advanced in iton. who captain, the league winners play-offs by stopping ZBT. 6-4, in the Intra- t coach's mural fraterhity softball division the num- yesterday at Ferry Field, incoln re- What looked like a pitcher's was side- duel up to the end of the third wept past turned into a victory for Sigma tr Chi when they scored three runs o display on ZBT errors. wed form In the fourth both teams trad- sposed of ed.runs and in the fifth Sigma e loss of a Chi wrapped up their prize pack- Mantin, a age. Denny Youngblood lead off season at by walking and came home on Bob Rossler's texas leaguer to center. ne upah, ent later when Frank Schwartz reached first on another error. 1~n i 3! take the s to make and Otto etzek and hton and Ziemann 4. put on a featured ig service "Clu c r L4)uiJ urfO'' T11 AL,',F~ONOAIC.00 3'71I - I l c aI ca fpr t u s t iht the to:4 t011 ed i x iand I)ftroit to tbring('teheIGore ird - i"c°,) )ehbt taito 1nstnthe itwo ~ Olut)', ollplet"'d titetr1ade lte tolij 1. r I~~~ 1:I TI Shoes that can take it! RUNS BATTED IN: Wiese, B F.R T S I 1 1 L ,.Y ithr/,apoloKies to 5 TOLL SIUCYU E AND MOTOR .'ALLS, whosc address was , rc~ ii :wr~rctlyni~ thir~ad of Mlay 1j5. It shouild be 12/ N o. AMain 5St. kTomasi, Compton; TRIPLE: Davis; DOUBLE PLAYS: To- masi and Wikel; Weisenburger and Wikel; Tomasi, Weisenbur- ger and Wikel; Coss (unassist- ed); BASES ON BALLS: of Dole 1, off Rossi 2, off Rankin 1; STRUCK OUT: by Rossi 2, by Rankin 2; HITS: off Dole 3 in 5 innings, off Rankin 2 in 4 innings. BIG WELCOME Kalamazoo College, a hot- bed of tennis enthusiasm, put on a real show for Michigan's tennis team, yesterday. Nearly the entire student body turned1 out to Stowe Stadium and par- ticipated in an impressive pre- match flag raising ceremony. The match was the high-point of -the Hornets campaign, and Coach "Doe" Stowe had been pointing his squad for Michi- gan all season. throughout. Paton finally broke through in each of the two sets to cop the match. Paton, Ziemann, Cook Star Along with Paton, Ziemann and Cook were the day's singles stars for Michigan. Booming in his big flat service consistently, Ziemann just overpowered Beresky, who specializes in steady "get the ball back" tennis. Cook wasn't bothered at all by the southpaw style of Mantin, winning twelve straight games, very few of which even went to deuce-. I K ARI 5 - 1 5, t l Ibiy lUi t. to take hard knocks in "all walks" of life! in work or play, rain or shIaIc, browki and w hite saddle shoes provide handsome antid durable protection for your feet. OUR BROWN AND WHITES ARE IN TOO! We h Toe and Loafers from $10.50 up. ive Win GOLF SHOES $11.00 and $19.95 in the Flying Bout style. TOWN RFNDCaMPUS 1317 SOUTH UNIVERSITY AVENUE (Just of f Washtenaw) g Tips, Moccasin I E Phone 2-3807 For the Girl Graduate . .. All ORCHID CORSAGE By Als' froua auuii! 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