THE MICHIGAN DAILY 111 Tennis SquadBlasts W ildc ats, 7-0 Undermanned NU Squad DroppedinStraight Sets Golden Puts Up Strong Fight Before Falling To Paton,_6-3, 64, in Day's Closest Match By TONY BUESSER and JOHN BARBOUR With two of their biggest guns missing from their mounts, the Wildcats of Northwestern surren- dered five singles and two doubles posts as they fell before the regu- lar Wolverine net squad, 7-0. Ted Peterson and Ted Hainline, regulars at number two and three singles for the Purple, failed to make it to Ann Arbor and rumor says it was car trouble. WILDCAT COACH P aul Ben- nett kept his ace Grant Golden in number one, but posted Scott Piet- ers, and Larry Daly at number thfee and four. He posted the absent Hainline at two and had the match can- celled ... and then filled the five and six singles with two rookies Marvin Goodkind and Curt Beus- man. Golden put on the best fight of the day against Andy Paton in the number one singles but he couldn't match the close, smart game that Andy played and fell in two sets, 6-3, 6-4. Al Hetzeck didn't get a chance to show his wares at number two due to the absentees, but Fred Otto coasted 6-0, 6-3 over out- matched Scott Pieters, who would have been much more at home in the number four bracket. * * * AT NUMBER four was the sixth bracket winner of last year's Con- ference Championships, Larry, Daly. Daly couldn't match the stuff of veteran Wolverine netter, Bill Mikulich, and dropped two sets and match, 6-1, 6-3. Don MacKay knocked off lWildcat Marvin Goodkind in the number five singles and the rec- ords were written 6-0, 6-2. Gordie Naugle had a fair match with Curt Beusman who showed a little more fight than most of the Wildcat squad who were mis- matched and showed it. Michigantook the number six singles 6-2, 6-3 to make it 5-0 go- ing into the doubles. * * * COACH BENNETT posted Ted Hainline with Grant Golden in the number one doubles match against/ Paton and Mikulich, and had that match cancelled. Al Hetzeck teamed up with Fred Otto to get in a quick match against Northwestern's Pieters and Daly, 6-3, 6-1. Daly recovered from his singles frus- trations to play better in the doubles. MacKay and Naugle erased the last set quickly in the doubles as the two Wolverines swept over Beusman and Goodkind 6-1, 6-1. The entire Wolverine squad with the exception of Bill Mikulich headed for Champaign, Illinois where they face the Illini on the Varsity courts at 2:30 this- after- noon. Dick Lincoln will fill in at num- ber six singles for the Wolver- ines. TarsSailing At Lansing, twin Cities By BOB VOKAC. Today and tomorrow the tars of the Michigan Sailing Club are featured in two regattas-500 miles apart. While part of the fleet is com- peting in the Michigan State Tri- angular Regatta at Lake Lansing, another portion will be carrying the Maize and Blue banners at Lake Calhoun in the Minnesota Invitational Regatta. [ THE THIRD CLUB in the trian- gular meet at MSC is Wayne, a newcomer to collegiate sailing ranks this year. Previously Wayne has competed in the Michigan In- vitational held at Whitmore Lake April 23 and 24. At that time the Tartars finished eighth in a field of nine teams while Michigan placed third. Since the Spartans finished a weak third behind second place Michigan in last weekend's Mid- west sectional regatta, the rec- ords at least indicate little op- position for the Wolverines at Lake Lansing. Michigan's sailors in the MSC regatta are: Gordon, Nelson and Lucy Sebald, Bob Johns and Mary Kellog. Nelson and Johns will be skippers while Sebald and Kel- log will handle the crew duties. AT LAKE CALHOUN in Minne- apolis, Minnesota is staging its first invitational regatta which is slated to be an annual affair. Participating in the races to- day and tomorrow in Gopher- land are: St. Thomas, Macales- ter, Wisconsin, Notre Dame, Michigan, Ohio State, North- western, Illinois Tech, Michigan State,Bowling Green, and Min- nesota. At the present time, Michigan looms as one of the favored teams in this meet. TOM SPECKMAN, Jene O'Con- nor and Frank Reed left yesterday noon to handle the sails for the Wolverine club. Since a limited number of Michigan members are making the trip, they will alter- nate between being skipped and crew. (Continued from Page 1) Jim Campbell singled to drive in two more tallies. The final Buck- eye run crossed the plate when Carl Parrill's blooper fell in be- tween the Wolverine third base- man and left fielder. MICHIGAN narrowed the count to 6-4 in the seventh. McDonald led off with a walk and Morrill followed with a sharp single to right. After Wolff grounded out, Raymond beat out an infield hit to score McDonald. Morrill also scored a little later when left fielder Willard Baker drilleda one-bagger to center field. In the eighth the Wolverines broke loose for four more runs to ice the ball game. Once again a walk, this one to Ralph Mor- rison, started the rally. Ted Kobrin followed with a ground single past the shortstop and McDonald drove in the fifth Michigan run with a hard double to right. This set the stage for Hold All-Campus Gym Tournament The all-campus gymnastic tournament was held at the I-M Building last night. Conrad Ettl won first place on the high bar and tied with Ray Taylor for the side horse, parallel bars and all around honors. Taylor also captured the flying rings event. Other first places went to Fred Thompson in the tum- bling competition and Sam Dudly on the trampoline. Morrill's game winning smash that chased in both McDonald and Kobrin. MORRILL TALLIED an insur- ance run when shortstop Weygant fumbled Raymond's grounder. Rankin bounced into a double play to end the big inning for the Maize and Blue. The Buckeyes threatened in both their half of the eighth and ninth. Pitcher Pete Perini and Verdova singled with one away in the eighth frame but Rankin settled down to retire both Gebhardt and Ranz. Morrison Provides Winning Edge with Double in Eighth In all the Buckeyes collected 14 hits, while Michigan had to be content with nine to cop the game. Perini, the leading pitcher of the conference last year, went the distance for Ohio. The two teams meet again to- Jay in the finale of the two game aeries. State Fencing Championships OpenToday Pete Young and Ed Micllef will represent Michigan's Scimitar Club when they journey into De- troit today in quest of the state's top foil fencing prize, the open championship title. The pair qualified to represent the Maize and Blue in foil sev- eral weeks ago along with Byron Krieger and Dick Yasenchek. *-* THE "BIG EVENT" will be held at the Book Cadillac Hotel in De- troit with the events slated to begin at 7:30 p.m. It will feature the state's best amateur swords- men in open matches in all wea- pons. Micllef has been Michigan's old reliable in foil, holding sev- eral state titles. His supremacy has recently been challenged by teammate Young, however. Young barely lost the inter- collegiate foil title to Micllef in March and led all qualifiers for today's event, beating Micllef in the semi-formal pool. * * * CHIEF COMPETITION for the Scimitar Club warriors should come from Byron. Krieger. Krieger, defending titlist and midwestern champ is one of the nation's fencing greats. He leads all midwestern fencers in na- tional rankings. Bela de Tuscan, coach of Wayne University and master of Salle de Tuscan, will direct all events in addition to giving one of his globe-famous exhibitions of the world's first sport. * * * PAUL WILLIAMS, Detroit ra- dio announcer, will act as master of ceremonies. Competition is to be in all weapons for men and, in foil for women. 'M' Golfers Illini, OSU By JERRY FANGER Michigan's linksmen tee off this morning at nine at the University course in a Western Conference triangular meet with Ohio State and Illinois, hoping that their first Big Nine home engagement will change their luck for the better. So far this spring the Wolver- ines have lost three straight league meets. After OSU squeezed by them, Purdue and Northwestern defeated the Maize and Blue golf- ers. THE BUCKEYES should pro- vide the most trouble for Mich- igan. Only three weeks ago the Bucks edged out the Wolverines 14%12-12% by completely dominat- ing the morning play at the Scar- let course. Coach Bob Kepler is sticking to the line-up that has kept OSU in the race for the Conference title. Bob Ranking and Chick Hendrickson are the first to tee off for the Buckeyes. These two gentlemen scored birdie threes on the eighteenth hole to spell defeat for Michigan previously this year. Norb Schlei and John Winters, who also registered victories over their Wolverine opponents three weeks ago, are to tee off in the second wave. Dick Widdoes and Dick Horch, who were the only Buckeye losers in the previous doubles match with Michigan, round out the Ohio State squad. * * * COACH RALPH FLETCHER'S Illini golfers will attempt to re- store a victory glint to what has been a very dismal season indeed. The Redmen have been play- ing good golf, but inconsistency has been their nemesis in close matches. Six consecutive defeats make the Illini underdogs in this meet. Captain Dave Logan and Art Wyatt who already has three letters in golf provide the one- two punch for the Illinois team. George Dayiantis and Ray Kimpel, the number three and four man on the team respectively, have been trying hard to break 76 con- sistently. George Culp and John Reif round out the six man team. * * * COACH BERT Katzenmeyer is using the same team that has played in the last three Michigan meets. I1 .1 MAN ABOUT TOWN .... ......., t. v. ." .f' : .7 I '" f f AP SPORT FLASHES Formal Rentals Summer White Coats and Black Trousers All new - All sizes Locally Stocked RABIDEAU-HARRIS .' 3'1 :ti'' . ,L4 '.i 119 So. Main Phone 6924 ARMY-TYPE FOOTLOCKERS $9.99 All taxes included A handy item for Travel or storage. SAM'S STORE. Open till 6:30 P.M. 122 E. Washington St. * 0 4~. r Durocher Signs NEW YORK-The New York Giants last night signed Leo Du- rocher as manager for two more years. His present contract ex- pires at the end of the 1949 sea- son. No salary terms were an- nounced. President Horace Stoneham said the board of directors of the club voted unanimously to extend the contract immediate- ly. VET'S WATCH REPAIR Moderns, keep up with the TIMES Blue Front - State & Packard West Lodge PX - Willow Lodge Community Drugs-E. Ann Arbor Eaton's Get-Acquainted Assortment brings you generous quantities of seven individual styles of Eaton's Fine Letter Papers - each distin. guished, delightful. Choose, through use, the writing paper that is per- fect for you. For here's good news: you can always get it again in Boxed Combination or Open Stock. Get acquainted now- this bargain is in limited spply! P1Y ~5 Leo returned to baseball's good graces 10 days ago after a brief suspension. He was banned by Commissioner A. B. Chandler pending a hearing on charges that he kicked a fan at the Polo Grounds following a game. The Commissioner exonerated Duroch- er, ruling that there was insuffi- cient evidence to prove any charges. Foster Beaten NEW YORK -Charlie Fusari, blond Irvington, N.J., whirlwind exploded the Vince Foster boom last night when he stopped the Omaha, Neb., youngster in 2:46 of the first round at Madison Square Garden after knocking him down three times. Foster weighed 147,. Fusali 1471/. The rangy New Jersey welter floored Foster with a right hand to the jaw midway in the open- ing round to startle a near ca- pacity crowd. Foster, wobbly and dazed, got up at two. Night Games AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 7, St. Louis 2. Chicago 11, Cleveland 10. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 3, St. Louis 2. New York 9, Philadelphia 1. Boston 6, Brooklyn 5. Cincinnati 7, Chicago 0. r I ii FAMOUS FOOD AT A FAMOUS PLACE WHAT? ... FILLET MIGNON Where? ... At The Allenel When? ... Today and Every Day Why? . . . To satisfy those longing desires for a truly deli- eious steam dinner. Adequate Banquet Facilities available 'for groups up to 250. THE ALLENEL HlOTEL SMITH-CORONA Typewriters, the world's finest, are popular on every campus. We have both Standard and portable models. Cut your homework in half with one of these efficient models. 0.. D. MORRILL 314 S. State 126 E. Huron For Reservations, Phone 4241 I ii I7 f1 STOREWIDE - Starts TODAY STOCK REDUCING Sale Of 9 A.M. SPORT SHIRTS for warm spring days in those colors Sals that please the eye. Available in Maroon, Grey, and Maize. $2.95 SAFFEL & BUSH 310 S. State St. Here is your chance to SAVE. Every single item in stock included in this sale (except merchandise fair traded by manufacturer). All original Price Tickets Remain - Add your fotal purchases - then deduct 15% from total bill. DISCOUNT I 1I I rl tiMitd',"' I E I. I