THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAE M Nine Mee ogan Grabsr anski Michigan Hurler GA Crown, In Revenge Tilt at I. SC Feesh Trackmen oast Needed Varsity Talent Sanity Code~s ChIICAGO. 'May, °5-(A.P)- A needy band player or debater may fare bedter than an im- pecunious footballer from cam- pus financial aid, if the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic As- sociation strictly enforces its "sait code." The NCAA's Constitutional Compliance Committee today issued its first interpretive bul- J ayvee Golfers wallop Albion in Final Match, (Special to The Daily) ALBION, May 25- Michigan's junior varsity golfers reached the height of success this afternoon, on the Albion College links, to close out the 1948 season with a smashing 18 i124 victory over the By BILL CONNOLLY Whoever takes over the reins as Wolverine track coach next season can lock with confidence past. the shadows of Barten, Fonvifleand company for aid from this year's FProshsquad. Since last September, when the distance runners reported for cross-country, between 50 and 60 men have been practicing to r_ strengthen their chances of fitting into a slot on next year's track squad. Since that time, about 20 men have shown indications of adding potential strength to fu- ture teams, Lots of Sprinters The Prosh are well fortified in the sprints, hurdles and field events, with Art Henrie, Jim Mitchell, Harry Allis and Russ Osterman leading the pack. An all-around trackman, Henrie is probably the outstanding candi- date for next year's team. Although Mitchell has shown the best form among the hurdlers, he is receiving competition from Don Hoover and Carl Bryant. Any of these three men could easily fill up the big gap open for hurdlers on the Varsity. Mitchell has run 15.1 for the 120 yard highs. Allis Tosses Shot Turning to the field events, Allis has not only putdthevshot over 46 feet-a good toss for a Freshman-but is also showing good form in the discus. With Osterman vaulting 12 feet six inches, and both Tom Elmblad and Robert Knecht clearing 11 feet six, there are indications of more points in the pole vault as 'M' Shippers, Haul in Sails Michigan's Sailing Club hauled down the canvas for the last time this season after the final race in the Michigan Invitational Regat- ta, the first time that this meet3 has ever been held. Eleven schools, all members of the Mid-western Association, com- peted for the trophy bearing the name of the regatta. Bowling Green, a newcomer to the group, edged out Notre Dame by one point to become the first winner. Ohio Wesleyan sailed third with Northwestern fourth. Since the Wolverine sailors were hosts and sponsored the regatta, they were not eligible to receive the trophy. In view of this, the Class A and B dinghies were manned by various crews in the club rather than the two stand- ard skippers. well as the shot put for next year's 1115 team. Rounding out the team, Bruce- Vreeland, Shel Murphy and Jim ST. LOUIS Ackerman are setting the pace in Hogan, golf's the rest of the running events. chanical wiza: Vreeland has begun a friendly trounced Mik rivalry with Doug Parks and Shel Plains, N.Y.,7 Capp for honors in the distance final match t races.- ond Professio Murphy Leads Ialf-milers tion Champio The greatest strength on the With $2,000 Frosh team comes in the middle' ence between distance events. In the 880, Mur- ande$1e5w0ene phy is followed across the finish tnd $1,500 se line by Warren Dywer, George proved too e f Jacobi and Jack Kaa2'burg. With prvdtI f 101' Turnesa, all four men running well under ing" club pro 2:05, Murphy is head man with a paratively fc 2:01 half to his credit.pativl e In hopes of adding strength to Turnesa'su the 1949 Varsity squad, a host of failed him an quarter milers have been compet- threat after ing for honors, with Jim Acker- streak on the man, and the versatle Art Henrie and reached t ending up on the top of the pile. up. In addition to these two men. Hogan, win $3,500 / , May 25-(IP)-Ben smiling little me- rd from Hershey, Pa., e Turnesa of White 7 and 6 in a 36-hole oday to win his sec- nal Golfers Associa- onship. at stake, the differ- $3,500 first money cond money, the lit- rn tournament star icient and consistent a 39-year-old "work- who plays in com- w tournaments. usually fine putting d he never was a real Ben hit a winning e second nine holes the halfway mark 4- nner of the title in is a. , . , : Winding up their non-Confer- ence schedule, Michigan's baseball team invades East Lansing today fyr the final game in a home and away series with Michigan State. The Wolverines will be seeking revenge for an earlier drubbing suffered at the hands of the Spartans, here in Ann Arbor. Sport,,75S Don McGregor, Dave Bunce and 194G, registered an approximate Arnold Gowans have sprinted the medal score of 65 for the morning quarter in good time. round and kept piling up birdies The Frosh seem to be strongest| in the afternoon. He ran out the in the events where the Varsity j match on the 30th hole as he won will need a boost next season. three holes in succession. HIS GAME'S IRONED OUT... K en Berk e BeaksRanks; Shares 'M' iniiks Laurels By DICK HURST A good case of confidence is all that is needed in a lot of cases to push a player out of the scrubs into a top varsity position. This is just about the story of Ken Berke, varsity golfer, who moved away from the pack this spring to capture a spot among the leaders. Berke is a senior this spring and, like many seniors he found himself staring at his last chance to win himself an M.' He had been on the varsity golf team for three years, but in three years that's all he had been -just one of the golfers, not quite ready to take his place on Mich- igan's top-notch team. Last year's team was veteran studded and Berke began to won- der if he would ever be able to break into the line-up. Then came the '48 season and, with Coach Bert Katzen- meyer and the rest of the team giving him the necessary 'en- couragement, Berke got a good grip on his game and started shooting the kind of golf he be- lieved himself capable of. Berke got his break in Mich- gan's first match against the Spartans and he's been hitting 'em ever since. Ken is not a spectacular golfer; his drives and iron shots are of average length and sometimes his putter goes hay-wire, but, when he blows up on one hole, it doesn't destroy his confidence. Rather, he grabs hold of himself and gives the next hole some extra special treatment. When the pressure has been on hehas responded amazingly well to help bring home a couple of matches that looked like they were going right out of the win- dow. In the Notre Dame match, he paced the Wolverines in both the morning and afternoon rounds to lead the way home with a 73 and 75 and give Michigan her first victory over the Irish on their course in the history of the series. In the second MSC tussle he blazed down the back nine with a 36 to help toss Michigan's tenth straight win right into the Wol- verine lap. And in the Detroit match he ploughed over the rain soaked course with a 76 to take medal honors for the afternoon. Ken's parents didn't drop him in the middle of a fairway in swaddling clothes,. hand. him a club and tell him he couldn't come home until he parred the course. He started lacerating the ball when he was about ten and had learned how to do everything wrong before a .pro got hold of him and straightened out his game. Because of the late start he got on serious golf he never startled his hometown, Milwaukee, as be- ing a child prodigy on the links, but in the last two years he has been a consistent 70's shooter and now totes a two handicap. This weekend Ken vill climax his college career when he travels to Northwestern to help the Wol- verines defend their Conference crown in the Big Nine champion- ships. DETROIT. May 25-(I h-Shel lacking four Detroit pitchers for 22 hits in their biggest scoring splurge of the season, the explo- sive New York Yankees plastered the Tigers 16 to 5 here today without benefit of a single home run. CLEVELAND, May 25 - UP) - Bob Lemon shutout the Washing- ten Senators on four hits and struck out 11 men tonight in hurl- ing the Cleveland Indians to a 4 to 0 victory. CHICAGO, May 25 - ('> Buddy Rosar's sixth inning single scored Hank Majeski with the winning run as the Philadelphia Athletics defeated Chicago, 4-3, before 19,426 persons here to- night. t: t ST. LOUIS, May 25-(/P)-The fast-riding Boston Red Sox were the victims of a murderous 17-hit assault by the St. Louis Browns tonight and dropped their seventh game in eight starts on their western trip, 9 to 4. PHILADELPHIA, May 25-'P) -Six-hit pitching by Paul Erick- son and Schoolboy Rowe and Del Ennis' fifth homer of the season with one man on gave the Phil- adelphia Phillies a 4-1 decision over the Pittsburgh Pirates to- night. * * * SANDWICH, England, May 25 -(A')-Frank Stranahan and Dick Chapman, a pair of famous U. S. golfers, moved into the third round of the British Amateur Tourney today along with a pair of lesser-known countrymen. Sgt. Charles (Chuck) Jennings of Med- ford, N.J., and Christopher Dun- phy of Westbury, N.Y., GREENLOCH, N.J., May 25 - (IP)-Jersey Joe Walcott today stopped all training for his June 23 Heavyweight fight with Cham- pion Joe Louis because of an in- fected foot. i4 AGIFT! Metal- Stemn Stsend 0 inid uppx PIPE MIXTURE Mail Lans & Bro. Co., Dept.20 { Richmod,a., ' with your name and address An Adventure in Good Smoking 1*d Michigan bowed 7-3 in a contest letin, warning that rigid code In registering their fourth held to seven innings by rain. application could deprive ath- straight triumph of theiyear, the The game will be the final letes of "some financial bene- Wolverines swept all six individual tune-up for a pair of weekend kits that might be available to matches and picked up an addi-j contests with Northwestern, others." tional point for low team total. which will end the 1948 season Its bulletin mainly discussed There were no best ball events. for the Wolverines. Bud Ran- | the three types of scholarships Jerry Weiler, who has led his kin is expected to get the start-. permissible One may be '' teammates most of the sea- ing assignment from Coach Ray awarded on a need basis, not son, and Bill Telfer turned in Fisher. exceeding. tuition. and. inci- the best scores of the current In all other respects, the Mich- i dental. fees.. The. committee campaign as they blazed their igan line up is expected to be emphasized that "incidental way over the short, hilly course the same as in recent games. with instutional fees" did not con- in an amazing 73 strokes. either Ted Berce or Willard Baker cern board and or room. Jim Haden with 82 and Don t shoitstop and depending on Denton with 78 were the victimsl h ether the Spartan coach John ____ Kobs starts a right or left hander, either Jack McDonald or Vic Fry- ling in right and either RalphTE Morrison or Baker in left. STO K-REDUCING While no definite MSC line-lip has been announced by Kobs, it is probable that the same team that faced the Wolverines here will take the field in today s games. While the immediate interest is on today's game, the long ME 'S SHOES range interest of the Michigan fans will turn on the weekend British Walkers, Curtis, Jarman, Fortune, series with Northwestern dand perhaps even more on the two Regularly Priced from 10.95 to game series down in Columbus, where the Buckeyes wind ita Sale Priced from 6.99 to 13.99 Reductior their season in an important pair of games with Illinois. Michigan needs two wins over the lowly Wildcats, who have a1I Sole EndsSP C A 100 record in Conference compe-S E SPECIAL tition with a single triumph inten! Saturday, While they last - women's play sh starts, while Illinois must lose YWiete ot-wmnspa h at least once to the Ohio State May 29th Fe to 7 . nne for the Big Nine race to end I Formerly to79 Now 1 in a tie. The Illini will have to lose two, while Michigan wins two, to give the Wolverines clear pos- W O EN'S session. Illinois, must therefore, win both contests to gain the title outright and a probable bid to the British Walkers, Penaljo, Friendly Sports NCAA tourney this June.R l Priced from 6.95Sto Bob Krestel, a converted quar- Regularly terback from the football team, will probably get the starting Sole Paced from 4.99 to 11.99 Reductio assignment for State. It will b2 Michigan's first twi- light game of the season, although they have played two games underT OU the lights during the year. TOW AND CAMPUS The Wolverines have a decid- ed edge in the traditional series,3t i having won 67 times against 1317 South University Ave. only 28 for the Spartans. One game ended in a tie. ere they are! Chas. A. Eaton 22.50 ns from 20%-50% Sale Ends, oes Saturday, 1.99 May 29th a of the prolific pair that plp-ed their last match for Michigan. In the number three and four matches, Dick Preston and Boab Keiser carded 75's to defeat George Wagnrer and Tom Steele by seven and eight strokes, respect- ively. Albion's John Oakes saved the home club from a shutout by picking up a half point in the fifth twosome as lie edged past Harvey Jones in the first nine holes. Jones rallied on the back nine and finished with an 80, four strokes ahead of Cakes, to take tihe remaining 2' points. The final event of the day saw newcomer Larry Shaw blank Brit- on Bob Pfeuffer by virtue of his sizzling 76, which was eight strokes better than Pfeuffer's 84. , and others 17.95 ns from 30%-50% i SH OES Phone 2-3807 I MRCXS M.OST DiEPIFIITP SCATRLLUTIO TO TEOI1S IS Rp-ulTTWISTING, FIGhK- SOUNCIN3 BALL.AU-LOWS ThE mRT1 IMEn TO TA1E TF m T N OdJe PL.AM A A - C * '4' - THE ,TWINS OF «, CHAMPIONSHIP CHAMPIONSHIP TENNIS SLA.WO *HMPONI The SPALDING and the Spalding. 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