THE MICHIGAN DAILY w Lin ksmen Bow t Wampler Blasts Par for Boilermakers; 'M' Off Form in Second Conference Loss 9 Purdue, 18.5-8.5 BULL SESSION by b. s. brown, sports editor .- n Schalon and Chuck MacCallum, for a 2-1 best-ball edge. Stack- house had a 74. Boilermakers John Cleary and Gene Coulter fashioned a pair of 73's to defeat Rog Kessler and Pete Elliott, adding three points to Purdue's side of the scoring ledger. Elliott went around in 76 while Kessler was soaring to a 79. , Michigan's Leo Hauser an'd Bob Olson turned the tables in the next match as they blanked John Hare and Gene Nemeth, 3-0. Hauser's 72 was the lowest Wol- verine score of the day. Michigan's morning average was 76.2 as com- pared to the 74.8 mark compiled by the winners. AFTER LUNCH, Wampler was even more terrific. Playing against Schalon he became the medalist of the tournament as well as the only par breaker with a two-under, 69. Schalon was helpless with a 77. Only two weeks ago, Wampler established a new record for this course at 63. The next four individual matches were monotonously dominated by the Boilermakers. Cleary nipped Kessler, 2-1, Hare shut out Olson, 3-0, Hauser dropped three to Coulter, and Stackhouse defeated MacCal- lum, 2-1. The final pairing was the only source of consolation for Mich-a igan,twhen Elliott flashed past Nemeth, 21/2 -1/2. Elliott was mas- terful through the first 16 holes' arid was two under standard fig- ures at that point. His ball carried into the woods on the par four seventeenth and he ended up with a six, and a total of 73. The Wolverines have moved on to Evanston where they will try again on Monday against the Wildcats of Northwestern. '11' Fireman Stops Illinois; Hicks Shelled (Continued from Page 1) away, and Skizas kicked around Koceski's hard grounder. McDon- ald got a free pass again filling the bases for Michigan. Wolff sent a long drive to Gecrge Parenti, and he dropped the ball for a two-base error. Raymond walked to load the sacks, and McDonald knotted the count as Grenkowski forced Ray- mond at second. With Ton Hoffman pitching, the Wolverines won the game in the eighth. Bucholz walked, Kobrin singled, and Koceski's hot grounder went through Skizas' legs, Bucholz crossing the plate with what prov- ed to be the winning marker. Ko- brin later scored on Wolff's fly to center. NOW THAT LIPPY LEO Durocher is back in the clear, his New 1 1York Giants are letting the rest of the senior loop know that they're going to be very much in contention for the 1949 flag. About the only thing that forced the pre-season prognosticators to by-pass the power-laden Jints was Durocher's weak mound staff. The fiery mentor had question marks in place of pitchers, but in the past week his flingers have transformed those question designs into emphatic exclamation marks. Clint Hartung started it off last Tuesday when he held the Pittsburgh Pirates to three runs while the New Yorkers were scor- ing five. Larry Jansen toed the rubber Wednesday and had an easy time of it as his teammates pushed across 11 tallies to the Bucca- neers' four. As if their performances were unsatisfactory, Sheldon Jones started off a trio of superbly-pitched Giant triumphs Thurs- day, with a neat twirling job against the Pirates. The Polo Grounds visitors were flagged from Manhattan, 3-2, with their third straight loss. Then Monte Kennedy came to the fore, chucking a masterful 3-0 victory over the Cards. It was Hartung's turn on the mound yesterday and for eight inn- ings it looked as though the Giants were going to notch another white- washing, a rarity for the New Yorkers of the past few years. Yielding only one hit in the first eight frames, the converted outfielder gave up two safeties in the ninth good for one Cardinal run, but it was hardly enough as the Giants easily took the game, 9-1, to move into a first place tie with the Braves. And it was Clint's fourth straight win, giv- ing him a 4-1 record for the infant season. The Giant hitting speaks for itself and it usually asserts itself with a mighty roar. Last year, any of the first eight batters were cap- able of blasting out a round-tripper in a given time at bat and the hitters haven't lost the knack of parking one in the stands this year. Sid Gordon is pacing the stickmen with six homers while Big Jawn Mize and Mickey Livingston have connected for four apiece. In addition, Mize has batted in 16 runs. Durocher doesn't have to worry about the hitters-they've proved themselves. But if the pitchers continue to display mastery on the mound, his worries are over-except for one. And that is: Who will be his starter in the first game of the World Series. -Daily-Hank Tyson GETTING BACK TO FIRST-Jack MacDonald slides back to first in yesterday's game as Tangman, Illinois pitcher, attempts to pick him off base. I 10, Villa-Lobos; and "Gloria in Excelsis." Gomer's DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN MILLER'S sx ICA SERVICE (Continued on Page 7) versity Choral Union, Thor John- son, conductor; Shirley Russell, soprano; Tann Williams, con- tralto; Harold Haugh, tenor; Mar- tial Singher, baritone! Gregor Pia- tigorsky, violoncellist, Program: Overture to "Prometheus"; Dvorak Concerto in B minor for Violon- cello and Orchestra; Choros No. HEADQUARTERS FOR THE B.M.O.C.!! You're invited to inspect our personnel, browse with our cli- entele, investigate our - shop services and workmanship at your convenience. Queries in- vited! The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State Sixth concert, Tonight, 8:30. Pia Tassinari, soprano; Eugene Ormandy, conductor. Program: Adagio for Strings, Barber; arias from operas by Mozart, Gluck, Pergolesi; Boito, Cilea, and Mas- cagni; and the Tschaikowsky Sym- phony No. 4. Complete announcements con- taining programs, sketches of per- formers, etc., may be obtained at the offices of the University Mu- sical Society, Burton Tower. Pro- gram books containing annota- tions, etc., will be on sale preced- ing each concert in the lobby of the auditorium. Concerts will begin on time. Doors will be closed during num- bers. Student Recital: Ruth Kluck- holm, Contralto, will present a program at 8 p.m. Tues., May 10, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music in Music Education. Miss Kluckhohn is a pupil of Leslie Eitzen. Her program, open to the public, will include compositions by Hendel, Legrenzi, Torelli, Ca- valli, Dvorak, Bach, Brahms, Wolf, Rimsky-Korsakoff, and Gretchan-! inoff. Student Recital: Merrill Wilson, a graduate student in the School of Music, will present a program at 8:00 Monday evening, May 9, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Music in Music Education. Mr. Music in Music Education. The program will include Concerto for Horn, No. 3 by Mozart. Sonata for Flute and Piano, No. 3 by Handel, and Brahms' Trio for Piano, Vio- lin and Horn. It will be open to' the public. Events Today U. of M. Hot Record Society: Live jam session featuring Dixie- land, swing, and Bop groups to- night at 8 in the Michigan League Ballroom. Complimentary admis- sion. Graduating Outing Club meets today at 2:15 p.m. at northwest entrance to Rackham building for outdoor activities suited to the climate. All graduates welcome. Roger Williams Guild: Supper, fellowship, worship at 6 p.m. Rev. Ernest Witham, Personnel Sdcre- (Coutinued on Page 7) ILLINOIS AB Trugillo, cf . .. .4 Plews, 2b ......4 Anderssohn, 3b . .5 Steger, lb ......5 Neal, lf ........3 Parenti, if .... 2 Ballantine, rf ..3 Skizas, ss......3 Gugala, c. 2 Tangman, p ... .3 Feldman, p ....0 Hoffman, p ... .1 *Kopka ........1 TOTALS ....36 R 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 6 H 2 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 8 PO 5 1 1 5 2 0 2 0 8 0 0 0 0 24 1 Wotta Relief! A 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 5 A 0 0 3 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 8, in E 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 E 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1! I HEAR that genial Matt Mann, Michigan's highly-successful swim- ming coach, is brushing up on his Spanish. And for good reason. The veteran Wolverine mentor, who just completed his 23rd season at the helm of the Ann Arbor natators, will conduct a three-week swim- ming clinic at Havana, Cuba, starting late this month. Complying with the request of five Cuban swimming organiza- tions, Matt will instruct both swimming teachers and Cuban swim- mers, in an effort to stimulate the aqua sport in Cuba. He also conducts annual clinics each winter at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and during the war went overseas in the same capacity. WELL, IT'S FINALLY OFFICIAL. After one year, the International Amateur Athletic Federation has approved Charlie Fonville's world- MICHIGA Baker, rf Morrison,c Bucholz, 2 Kobrin, 31 Koceski, 1 McDonald, Wolff, ss . Raymond, Hicks, p Grenkowsk TOTALS *-Struck ninth. N ABH R PO .f ....3 0 0 3 b ....4 122 b ....4 2 1 0 f ....5 3 1 2 lb . .2 0 0 5 . ...4 1 0 0 0 c ....3 0 1 13 . . .. ..1 0 0 0 i, p ..2 1 0 1 . .t..31 8 5 27 out for 1#offman i shattering mark in the shot put. On. over the wires that the Michigan star] 58 feet % inch to erase the mark set in giant, Jack Torrence. April 17, 1948, the news came had heaved the 16-pound shot 1934 at Oslo, Norway, by LSU's Have You Checked the Classifieds? - . ti 1, if ,t 1i MAY 9 through JUNE 11 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre . MARTHA SCOTT BASIL RATHBONE LUCILE WATSON in "Night Must Fall" in "The Heiress' The Ann Arbor Drama season of 1949 ... five great plays "AH, WILDERNNES "AS "TWELFTH NIGHT" - "NIGHT MUST FALL" YOU DESIRE ME" "THE HEIRESS" i Seats for individual performances now on sale Season Tickets still available .. a - _ ~ - __ 1.. an - - 11 II ..... .... ... .. 11 II n: ,