SUNqDAY, M 3a, r)- 950 - THE MICHIGAN DAILY W olverine Nine Hands 'U Second 10-3 Defeat t Fourth Conference Victory Maintains First Place Lead Varsity Golfers Oppose _k Northwestern Tomorrow By JIM PARKER - Michigan maintained undis- puted possession of first place in the Big Ten baseball race dumping Indiana's Hoosiers for the second time by a 10-3 score yesterday at Ferry Field. The Wolverines pounded out 12 well-bunched hits, four of which went for extra bases, to post two four-run innings and a two-run 'M' Meets Irish Weather permitting, Michi- gan's Conference leading base- ball team will journey to South Bend tomorrow to meet Notre Dame. The game had been ori- ginally scheduled for April 25, but adverse weather conditions forced the contest to be re- scheduled. eighth in registering their fourth straight Conference victory. Only two Michigan singles failed to figure in the scoring. AFIVE WOLVERIN4E batters col- lected two hits apiece, highlight- ed by Leo Koceski's two-run hom- er in the third inning and Pete Palmer's four runs batted in. Bill Bucholz, Hal. Morrill and Bob Wolff each got two singles. Starting pitcher for the Maize and Blue, right hander Bob Hicks got credit. for his second Conference victory, although he had to be relieved by Dave Settle in the sixth inning Indiana's Jim McGee, who fanned ten Wolverines in the first five innings he pitched, was the loser. * * * BUCHOLZ started the damage in Michigan's four-run fourth inning by singling to center, Ko- ceski then slammed a 2-2 pitch to the tennis courts and beat the relay home with a head first dive to the plate, for his four bagger. Morrill then rapped out a single and scored on Palmer's double down the right field line. Wolff followed with a single that drove in Palmer with the final run of the inning. The Hoosiers came back in the sixth to solve Hicks for their only four hits and all their runs. LOU WATSON homered to open the inning and hits by Harry Rit- ter and John Gorkis, a walk to McGee and Woody Litz' single produced two more runs and that : was all for Hicks. Settle entered the game with men on first and third and got Bill Brabender to pop up for the final out. For three frames after that Settle allowed but one Hoosier to get on base Three hits and an error gave vichigan four more runs in the seventh. Ralph Morrison doubled, went to third on Morrill's infield out and was squeezed home on Palmer's bunt. WOLFF then singled over sec- ond base, Bob Fancett walked and Gerry Dorr blasted a single through the box that Ritter bob- bled to allow all three Wolverines to score. In Michigan's eighth McGee went to the showers after walk- ing Bucholz and giving up a double to Koceski. But relief pitcher Bill Sirka walked pinch hitter Ted Berce to fill the bases and then was tagged by Palmer for a hard single to right field that drove in the final two Wolverine runs. 1 d By CY CARLTON Despite an official weather pre- diction of snow, Bert Katzenmeyer hopes to start his Maize and Blue linksmen on winning ways tomor- row when, the Wolverine golfers oppose Northwestern on the Uni- versity Course. Michigan's golfers are winless this season, having dropped three meets on their Southern trip and finishing third in a Triangular meet with Ohio State and North Texas State. The Wolverines have twice been rained out of home contests with the University Detroit. of NEW CHIEF - The Board in Control of Student Publications yesterday named Bill Connolly, pictured above, to the Daily Sports Editorship. Bdig Ten [Standings I * * * NORTHWESTERN, fifth finish- er in the conference last year, comes to town with three letter- men and a flock of newcomers. The Wildcats are headed by Capt. Chuck Steingraber, with Bob Rei- land and Jimmy Love, the remain- ing pair of lettermen. So far this season, the Wild- cats have been successful reg- istering victories over Iowa and the University of Detroit. In the Detroit meet, Steingraber beat the Titans' number one golfer, Sam Kocsis, although the score was not exceptional. Love and Reiland round out the second and third singles spots with newcomers filling the other three positions. The match, scheduled to start at 9 a.m. will be played on the basis of best ball play in the morning and individual match score in the afternoon. The after- noon round starts at 1:30. Tomorrow will be the first of three busy days at home for the Maize and Blue linksmen as the Wolverines, weather permitting, will meet University of Detroit on Tuesday and Michigan State on Wednesday. Drake Shot Put Crown To Fonvilie Special to The Daily DES MOINES, IOWA - Char- lie Fonville paced the Wolverine entries in the Drake Relays here yesterday as he out-shot Byrl Thompson of Minnesota and John Helwig of Notre Dame to capture the shot put event. Fonville's winning toss was 52 feet 11j_' inches, MICHIGAN'S distance medley relay quartet of Bill Konrad, Aaron Gordon, Charlie Whiteakei Detroit New York Cleveland Washington, Boston Philadelphia St. Louis Chicago W 6 4 5 5 4 3 1 Major League Baseball L 2 4 3 4 6 6 5 4 Pct. .750 .600 .571 .556 .455 .400 .375 .200, AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 1 1 1% 2% 11/ 3 3 3r Brooklyn Chicago Pittsburgh Boston Philadelphia St. Louis Cincinnati New York W '7 3 6 5 5 4 2 1 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 6, Washington 2 St. Louis 5, Cleveland 1 TODAY'S GAMES New York at Washington - Raschi (1-) vs. Hudson (1-1). Detroit at Chicago - (2) Trucks (2-0) and Hutchinson (0-1) or Houtteman (2-0) vs. Wight (0-2) and Heafner (0-1). St. Louis at Cleveland -- (2) -Starr (1-1) and Fannin (0-1) vs. Wynn (0-1) and Garcia (0- 0). Philadelphia at Boston; YESTERDAY'S, Philadelphia 2, Boston 1 Cincinnati 14, Pittsburgh 6 TODAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at New York - Hat- ten (1-0) or Banta (1-0) vs. Jones (0-2) or Jansen (1-1). Boston at Philadelphia - (2) -Roy (0-0) and Donovan (0-1) vs. Meyer (0-1) and Roberts (Z- 0).- Chicago at St. Louis - Schmitz (1-0) or Rush (1-0) vs. Brecheen (0-1). Pittsburgh at Cincinnati L Pet. GB 2 .7'78 .. 1 .750 12 3 .667 1 5 .500 2 5 .500 2 5 .444 3 6 .250 41/2 6 .143 5 RE SULTS World Mark Set LOS ANGELES-(P)-Yale's Jim Fuchs bettered the world shot put record and the Uni- versity of Southern California routed Michigan State and Yale in a triangular meet yes- terday before 15,226 fans. U.S.C. amassed 96 points, Michigan State 34 and Yale 32. Fuchs put the shot out 58 feet 51 inches, bettering the listed record of 58 feet % inches set by Charley Fonville of Michigan in 1948. h. -1 IP IN M R K G~ M a" b- Riding NDIANA AB: ,itz 2b 2 Irabender rf 5 ling ss 4 Vatson if 5 garkle lb 4 titter cf . 4 kyle 3b 3 .orkis c 3 icGee p 2 irka p 0 -Phillips 0 ,-Hoover 0 TOTALS 32 R 4 0 a 4 1 1 0 0 High IH O A l 0 1 2 4 1 D0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 11 0 0 1 a 0 10 0 1 1 1 a a D0 1 3 1 1 1 9 2 0 0 0 1 + D0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 { 0 0 0 0 3 42412 MICHIGAN Wisconsin Iowa Illinois Ohio State Indiana Northwestern Minnesota Purdue W 4 3 3 3 2 1 1 1 0 L 0 1 2 2 3 3 4 1 Pct. 1.000 .750 .600 .600 .500 .250 .250 .200 .000 ~. ..-r /s\ he gave her a I NEW' a-hit by pitcher for 9th b-ran for Phillips in MICHIGAN AB R H Bucholz 2b 2 1 2 Koceski If 4 2 2 Morrison cf 5 1 1 Morrill lb 4 1 2 Froscheiser lb 0 0 0 Palmer c 4 1 2 Wolff ss 5 1 2 Fancett rf 3 1 0 Dorr 3b 3 1 1 Hicks p 2 0 0 Settle p 1 0 0 c-Berce 0 0 0 TOTALS 33 10 12 c--walked for Morrill Sirka i 9th O 1 4 3 11 0 5 1 2 0 0 0 0 27 in 8 A 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 2 1 1 0 8 8th l E 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 n E 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 * * * CHTCAGO-(iP)-While Michi- gan was bolstering its Big Ten baseball lead with another 10-3 win over Indiana at Ann Arbor yesterday, Wisconsin took an- other game from Northwestern, beating the Wildcats, 4-2, at Evanston. The victory left the Badgers in sole possession of second place. At Minneapolis, Illinois moved into a third place tie with idle Iowa by swamping Minnesota, 11-2, before the weather forced postponement of the second game. The Iowa-Purdue game was also called. At Columbus Ohio State dropped a 6-3 decision to Michigan State in a non-conference battle. BILL BRENTON . . . new associate editor Gophers Win BowlingTitle By The Associated Press LAFAYETTE, IND. - M in n e- sota won the second annual West- ern Conference Bowling Tourna- ment with a seven-pin edge over Michigan yesterday. The Minnesota team of Don Bergman, Karl Dosen, Robert Thompson, Jim Ronning and Jack Albers posted a total of 2,651. Other team scores: Michigan 2,644; Purdue 2,611; Illinois 2,550; Michigan State 2,519; Wisconsin 2,511; Indiana 2,478. and Don McEwen ran a disap- pointing third behind Ohio State and Wisconsin. The Buckeyes, anchored by Len Truex, slushed through the rain, sleet, snow and hail to clock the relay in 10:14.6 to beat-out the favored Wisconsin quartet anchored by Don Gehr- mann. Don Hoover was the final Michigan competitorsin the soggy two day cinder carnival. Run- ning in the 220 low hurdle event, Hoover placed fourth with Paul Leming of Texas A & M winning in the time of :24.2. PHILADELPHIA - In the 55th running of the Penn Re- lays here yesterday, Pete Den- drinos notched a fourth place for Michigan in the shot put attraction. Stan Lampert of NYU snared the event with the winning heave of 53 feet, 4 inches. for Mother's Day? " WORLDS IN COLLISION by Immanuel Velikovsky-$4.50 " THE CAPTAIN'S DEATH BED and other essays by Virginia Woolf-$3.00 * THE IMMORTAL LOVERS by Frances Winwar-$4.00 " A MEASURE OF FREEDOM by Arnold Foster-$2.50 " THE AGE OF INDISCRETION by Clyde Davis-$3.00 " OUT OF THE EARTH by Louis Bromfield-4.00. * A MAN FROM SOUTH DAKOTA by George Reeves, winner of the Avery Hopwood Major Award, 1949-$3.00 WAHR'S University Bookstore 316 South State 1 81, 0 0 lt BOB SANDELL . .sports associate head 1. 1i INDIANA ... .00 003 000-.3 MICHIGAN ..004 000 42x-10 Wakefield Refuses White Sox Bid inDemand for Pay Raise m : -........... -11 'the jlhh /Io6o tZAtna £eajv# Five Weeks - May 15 - June 17 - The Tempest-- Born Yesterday The Winslow Boy The Barrier - Getting Married (THE WINSLOW BOY opens Tuesday, May 30; all other openings on Mondays.) SEASON TICKETS: Evenings: $12.00-$9.60-$7.20-$4.80 Matinee: Thursday: $7.20-$4.80 Saturday: $9.60-$7.20-$4.80 Be Sure to Specify Performance Desired. Mail Orders Now (No Box Office Sale until May 5) LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE CHICAGO - (A) - Outfielder Dick Wakefield yesterday refused to join the Chicago White Sox after the club obtained him from the New York Yankees but re- jected his demand to make up a $5,300 Yankee paycut. Long distance phone wires buz- zed between Wakefield in Wash- ington and Sax general-manager Frank Lane this morning. The liet result was that Lane called off, temporarily, yesterday's deal with the Yanks for Wakefield in ex- change for undisclosed cash and outfielder John Ostrowski. * * * WAKEFIELD wanted his pre- sent Yankee salary of $17,000 hik- ed back to the $22,500 he got from the Detroit Tigers before he was swapped last winter for Yankee first sacker Dick Kryhoski. Wakefield, a 6-foot, 4-inch American League enigma the past few seasons, said the pay- cut must be restored or the Sox could do without him. Lane retorted the boost was out and the Sox WOULD do without him. The Sox boss said the club had negotiated for his Yankee contract, as is, and not his De- troit contract. * * * HOWEVER, few people are bet- ting Wakefield won't show up in White Sox uniform in a day or two. The Sox wanted Wakefield especially for tomorrow's doubl-e header here with Detroit to send the former Chicago high school star against his old Tiger mates as insurance for a good sabbath gate. At New York, the Yankee front office offered Wakefield a plane ticket to Chicago and urg- ed him to talk things over per- sonally with Lane. Wakefield had appeared twice as a pinch-hitter for the Yankees, banging out one hit. He is as- sured a regular berth, at least for a while, in a Sox outfield which also would include Gus Zernial and Dave Philley. THE 28-YEAR-OLD Wakefield has lost considerable luster since he set the American League on fire in 1943, a year out of the Uni- versity of Michigan. Some say apathy developed because he was riding the Tiger bench. Others say it was the other way around. Onslow's comment was turn- about on a recent reported dis- cussion of a possible Yankee deal in which he was supposed to have said: "Lindell (outfielder Johnny Lindell) can't move off a dime. Wakefield won't. The right field fence is only 298 feet away from home plate in Yankee Stadium and still Wakefield can't break into the lineup." Your hair is our care Try its for Workmanship, Service, Personnel The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State To Celebrate the Opening of the Campus Bootery 25 years ago we offer for Just one week real bargains on our huge stock of Fine Shoes. All Spring The U. of M. Theatre Guild Presents BEN JOHNSON'S LUSTY COMEDY Ii TUXEDO SIk I" A I ec 11 I I