MbAY 24, 1947 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Michigan Nine Def eats Wildcats, 7-6 6 _ __ ti 4 ichigan Host To NCAA Golf Championships A field of 175 golfers is expect- ed to gather at the University of Michigan course, June 23-28, for the fiftieth annual National Col- 10giate Athletic Association indi- vidual and team championships. Qualifying rounds will be held June 23-24, with 18 holes of play set for each day. Team champ- ionship will be determined during the two qualifying rounds. A field of 32 qualifiers will be- gin match play for the individual title, June 25, with 18 holes sched- uled for Wednesday and Thurs- day. The semifinal round of 36 holes will be held Friday, June 27, with the championship to be determined by 36 holes of play, Saturday, June 28. Entries will close June 14, ac- zording to Ted B. Payseur, ath- letic director of Northwestern Uni- versity, and chairman of the NCAA golf committee. Payseur said that definite effort will be made this year to place the tour- nament back on its pre-war status. H. 0. Crisler, director of ath- letics at the University of Mich- igan heads the local executive committee in charge of arrange- ments. Other members include Prof. Ralph Aigler, Michigan's conference representative, Ernest B. McCoy, assistant athletic di- rector; Dr. E. D. Mitchell, chair- man of the department of physi- cal education and Bert Katzen- meyer. Dr. Thomas E. Tr'ueblood, Students May Order Football Tickets Now University of Michigan students who plan to place orders for foot- ball tickets for relatives or friends for either season or for individual games next fall are urged to ob- tain ticket application blanks as soon as possible so that orders may be placed in advance of the Aug- ust 1 deadline. It was pointed out that those students who place such orders should get application blanks now available at the ticket of- fice before the present semester ends, in order to make certain that the orders are received prior to August 1. Ticket orders may be placed im- mediately for both games at home and those away. Orders for sea- son tickets received by August 1, will be pooled, drawn by lot and then filled in the order drawn. Season tickets for the six home games on Michigan's 1947 schedule are priced at $18 tax included. Individual game seats will be priced at $3.80, tax in- cluded with box seats selling for $4.80, tax included. PITTSBURGH, May 23-- (AP)-Charley Moss, University of Michigan swimmer from Wheeling, WVA., broke . two Allegheny Mountain Associa- tion A.A.U. records in winning the 440-yard and 100-yard free-style titles in the Irene Kaufman Settiement pool to- day. Wolverines Overcome Lead To Win; Wise Victor Northwestern Outfits Michigan As Wikel Paces Maize and Blue Attack with Two Hits Special To The Daily EVANSTON, Ill., May 23 - It took Michigan's Wolverines 11 in- nings to do it, but they made up for a weak start and beat Northwest- ern today, 7 to 6. The two teams battled into ex- tra innings after Northwestern had jumped to a 4 to 0 lead in the first inning of the Big Nine third place battle. Cliff Wise, the Wolverines sturdy right hander was on the mound opposing Dick Bokelman when Northwestern put Michi- gan deep into the hold. Bokel- man left in the 8th but Wise was still standing there firing them in when it was all over at the end of the 11th. He gave up 11 hits along the way, but the Maize and Blue played their best baseball when the runs were needed and seven North- western errors helped. Jack Weisenburger's single to right center field scored Howard Wikel to break a 6-6 deadlock in the 11th inning. Prior to that Micthigan had surged ahead of the Wildcats with a 3-run uprising in the 7th inning. Singles by Johnny Kulpinski and Howard Wikel, interspersed with walks to Chalmers Elliott and Wise and a pitch that hit Weisenburger, scored the runs. Michigan got an unearned run in the ninth inning after Paul White was hit on the ankle by Hal Stretton, Bokelman's re- lief, and had to leave the game. Paul Veith, running for White, stole second and third and sored on an infield error. Northwestern rallied to score two runs in the final half, of the ninth and tie the count on a dou- ble by pinch-hitted Larry Day, a single by second baseman Dutch Dunning and another single by center-fielder Bob Wilson, the Big Nine's leading batter. Wilson had three for four for the the Wildcats -all singles. Howie Wikel got two of the seven hits that Michigan was able to register off three North- western pitchers. Bump Elliott got the only Wolverine double base blow-a solid double in the sixth inning. Wise had good control consid- ering the chilly winds and low temperature that kept the crowd down around the 100 mark. Ile walked only three men. Jack Ogle, crack left-handed freshman from Washington, D. C,. will pitch for Northwestern in the second game of their series tomor- row. His opponent has not been named. Michigan AB R H White LF......... 3 1 0 Elliott CF .... s...4 1 1 Wikel 1B.........5 1 2 Weise RF........6 1 0 Weisenburger SS. 5 0 1 Tomasi 2B ........5 1 1 Ketterer 3B .. .... 6 0 1 Kulpinski C ..... 2 1 1 Raymond C ...... 1 0 0 Wise P .......... 4 1 0 Veith X ......... 2 0 0 Bodycombe XX .. 1 0 0 Totals ...........44 7 7 POA 2 0 2 0 17 0 3 0 2 3 1 3 1 4 2 0 3 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 33 14 i'r COLLEGE MEN! BECOME MERCHANDISERS Retail chain operating in Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, and Ohio is placing in training a group of young men, 21 to 26 years of age, for first objective of store manager. Starting salary $216 per month plus commissions and at least three advancements within the first year. First year earnings should be at least $3,000. All executive positions are filled from within the organ- ization, so you can start today and know you can become an executive if Merchandising is going to be your life work. Contact Mr. Yudin, Wednesday, May 28, at Mason Hall, Room 306, between 1:30 and 4:30 P.M. 1i' X11 i lsmmamme- I 'I "Custombilt Junior" THE NEW, ECONOMICAL, BETWEEN-CLASSES SWEET SMOKING PIPE $2.00 STATE STREET AT LIBERTY .11 Riace Drivers Settle Dispute INDIANAPOLIS, May 23-(om)--- Reconciliation of the Indianapolis speedway management and a hold- out group of car owners and driv- ers became official today, and big-name drivers immediately be- gan warming up for the 500-mile race May 30. At Chicago Ralph Hepburn, president of the American Society of Professional Automobile Rac- ers, announced that the group had voted unanimously to accept an offer by Anton Hulman Jr:, the speedway owner, to pay out of his own pocket extra money as prizes for ASPAR drivers who qualify for next Friday's race. "All ASPAR drivers are re- leased to enter the 500-mile race May 30," Hepburn said. "That's fine," was the brief comment of Wilbur Shaw, Speed- way president, when informed of Hepburn's announcement. Hepburn said about ten ASPAR cars should be in Indianapolis for the qualification trials to be held tomorrow and Sunday. Some of the holdout group ap- parently had anticipated settle- ment of the dispute for the words were scarcely out of Hepburn's mouth before several of them were at the track. Among them was Fred A. Peters of Paterson, N. J., who showed up with the four-cylinder, rear drive Offenhauser which finished first in the 1941 race with Mauri Rose and Floyd Davis as co-pilots. X-Batted for White in 9th XX-Batted for Raymond in 7th Northwestern AB R H PO A Dunning 2B .......6 1 2 1 3 Burson SS....... 51 1 42 WilsonCF......41 3 2 0 Schwartz LF .... 2 1 1 1 0 Tourek 3B ........5 1 2 1 2 Hendricks RF . .. 5 0 0 6 1 Schadler 18......4 0 0 11 2 MooreC......... 5 0 1 7 2 BokelmanP.......2 0 0 0 1 Stretton P ....... 1 0 0 0 1 Alstrin P ........ 0 0 0 0 1 Regas LF ........ 2 0 0 0 0 Day X ........... 1 1 1 0 0 Swenson XX ...... 1 0 0 0 0 Totals ...........43 6 11 33 15 X-Batted for Stretton in 9th XX--Batted for Alstrin in 11th Michigan ......010 100 301 01-7 Northwestern. 400 000 002 00--6 Wally Teninua In Dual Rol Is the pen mightier than the bat? That's the predicament Cpl. Wally Teninga,, Michigan's lead- ing pigskin carrier of 1945, now faces at Camp Lee, Va. Teninga, currently playing sec- ond base for the Camp Lee war- riors, is also lending his literary talents to the post newspaper, the Lee Traveller, in the role of a boxing reporter. It al started when Editor Joe Western discovered that his en- tire sports staff was up for dis- charge last month. Without any replacements on the sports desk in sight, the Army editor agreed to cover the dia- mond doings of the soldier nine, but further assistance was need- ed to report the other sporting events. That's where the co-operative Teninga, who expects to return to Ann Arbor this summer, agreed to follow the exploits of Camp Lee's crack boxing team. His first by-line graced the Lee Traveller sports page recently. Which all proves that athletes can often develop into sports scribes-but onec you become a wrter the only exercise you get are on the keys of a typewriter. A HEALTHY HEAD! with a scalp treatment. Per- sonality or crew-cut style - for summer comfort. The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty off State iMayow Leaoue Roundup By The Associated Press Larry Jansen and the grand slam The Detroit Tigers lengthenedI homer of Johnny Mize. their league lead in the American Two walks with the bases loaded League to a game and a half with in the seventh inning enabled the a 5-2 victory yesterday over the Brooklyn Dodgers to come from Chicago White Sox on Al Benton's behind and hand the Phillies a 5-4 seven hit pitching while the second defeat last night, snapping Dutch place Boston Red Sox were being deonard's five-game win streakc blanked by New Yorker Allie Reyn- Lg olds as the Yankees clouted out a Big Red Munger shut out Pitts- 9-0 win over the Bosox. burgh 2-0 with a six-hit perform- The Athletics scored their ance to give the Cardinals their seventh straight night victory by second straight victory over the beating the Washington Senators, Pirates. 8-1. Chet Laabs led the attack on Going into the twelfth inning Mickey Haefner with a three runit h the sore te a crowdnof homer in the fourth. wihie cr tied, a crowd ol 61,227 saw the St. Louis Browns In the National League race, push across two runs on a single, the New York Giants climbed into a sacrifice, a triple, and a squeeze first place with an 8-1 victory over play to defeat the Cleveland In- the Braves behind the pitching of dians in a night game, 5-3. P1/Y*1 CTH RE4TEST 5411 IN TENNIS A new center makes the WrightAN & Ditson bounce consistently to the upper limits of i SLTA rebound standards. For 70 years the official and only tennis ball used in National Champion- ships and inall U. S. Davis APPROVE D U.S. L TA.'c Cup matches. . ALL WOOL COVE .55c ea.. . .:A EXTRA STRENGTM HFOR )f EXTRA MIT/MG POWER Play a Davis Cup racket and you have extra strength-right where you need it-in the racket throat where hitting shock is great- est. 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After being sidelined for a the season, beginnin at 1 p.m. on while with an injured foot, Gor- the varsity courts in Ferry Field. don aigle will be back at his fifth This will be ther Wo lverines last;1 Post, with Hal Cook rounding out chance to see action against any the lineup at number six, conference fo until they jiourney In the doubles, the usual Michi- to Evanston for the Conference gan pairings will be used. Paton Championship maches on May 29- and Otto will be at number one, 31. Ziemann and Mikulich in the sec- Although the Ohio squad ond position and Cook and Nau- dropped a 9-0 decision to the gle playing number three. same Kalamazoo CulhmeC team that With a hard week's work at their Michigan beat 5-4, Coach Bob backs, the Wolverines took it a lit- Dixon is taking ho chances and is tle easy yesterday in spite of the sending his best men aainst the fact that they have a match to- Buckeyes. day. 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