THE MICHIGAN ,DAILY PAGETel 4: r _. , lichigan Netmen Rout S C 7-1; Linksmen Lose Volverine Nine To Face roncos at Kalamazoo * * * Tennis Squad Sweeps .Five Singles,Takes Both Doubles * * * Purdue Ends Michigan Golf Streak at Six, 14 -12 Ii By HAROLD TANNER /lichigan has a chance to square non-conference record this af- noon when it journeys to Kala- zoo to engage Western Michi- i's Broncos. lthough the two victories over -due over the weekend padded Wolverine's Big Ten league d, they have won two while los-, three in non-conference play ce returning from the Southern ng. ?he Maize and Blue slipped by Broncos, 8-7, early in the nth at Ferry Field for one of its ) non-conference triumphs. n the first game between the teams Coach Ray Fisher in- ted four pitchers into the Mi- gan lineup, and this procedure 1 probably be put into practice tin today. Uthough happy with the double tory over Purdue, Fisher was initely displeased with the woe-I failure of his pitching corps I plans to use today's game as newhat of a testing grounds for nger pitchers in an attempt to d someone ready for Big Tei ion. the Michigan pitching staff ided 13 runs and 28 hits in the game series and presents a .inite problem with two crucial iference series coming up-one ;h Wisconsin and the other with -.io State. ienry Burmeister who hurled first inning of collegiate ball turday is Fisher's nominationto e the Broncos this afternoon. rmeister is to be followed by *ty Bob Larson and Al Virgona ;h Dave Settle a fourth choice. Western Michigan currently in the race for honors in the Mid- America conference used three hurlers against Michigan in the first game. Jerry Hogan, the ace, of the staff was the starter and was tagged with the loss. Hogan is the probable selection for to- day's contest. Don Groggel, slugging right-* fielder, is the Broncos' big offen- sive weapon. Groggel collected* three hits in five trips to the plate against Michigan. One of his hits was a long homer. Michigan developed into quite a' long ball hitting team over the weekend with Bob Fancett's two homers and Leo Koceski's singleton highlighting the extra base bar- rage. -Daily-Wally Barth AL HETZECK . . . power plus Depth Deficiency Impairs T akC neec oe Trc Cofrec Hoe 1 4 By GEORGE FLINT . Saturday's Illinois-Northwest- ern-Michigan triangular t r a c k meet, which went right down to the wire, and ended up about the same way the Illinois-Michigan meet did indoors, showed up some weaknesses in the Wolverine squad which may be injurious to their conference chances. Although the Maize and Blue picked up five first places and a reasonable collection of seconds, they took only five thirds, while plating nine in the fourth spot. Villiams, Tyler Enter Finals If IM Residence Hall Softball AG OUT OF THIS maze of figures can be drawn the inference that Michigan has a lot of men who can place in dual meets, but who'll be out of the money in conference competition. It's just the other way around with the Illini and Ohio State's Buckeyes, who have the good but not great men who can be counted on for place points. Saturday's fracas did throw a little bright light in the way of the Wolverine, however. Don Hoover, for instance, proved that his 23.3 time in the Ohio State meet was no fluke of the wind, as he turned in a 23.7 mark, only two tenths of a second off the varsity record. And Don McEwen added anoth- er varsity record to his growing collection, with a 4:12 mile clock- ing which cracked the 4:14.6 rec- ord set by the Hume brothers in 1945 and tied by Herb Barten in 1948. McEWEN NOW has only one varsity mark left to shoot at-and it looks like the toughest of all. He'll have to turn in a peak per- formance to top Ralph Schwarz- kopf's 11-year-old outdoor two mile record of 9:03.5. By JOHN BARBOUR Michigan's tennis team did in four hours yesterday what Wol- verine teams have been trying to do since midwinter. They beat Michigan State. Posting their twenty-second consecutive win, the Maize and Blue netmen strangled Vhe Spar- tan tenniA squad 7-1 on Ferry Field's Varsity courts. OLD RIVALS faced each other in the number one singles match as Wolverine Don MacKay and Len Brose of Michigan State stood cross net. Brose had beatenMac- Kay twice last year and once in '48. But this time it, was the top man on the Wolverine totemj pole all the way, taking Brose in two quick sets 6-1, 6-2. In one of the neatest matches of the day Al Hetzeck overpower- ed his game Spartan opponent, Dave Mills, with a series of hard overhead smashes 6-2, 6-1. * * ' THE MUCH IMPROVED Dick Lincoln, working for tho Maize and Blue in the number three spot, whisked past the Green and White's Dick Rieger in a first set 6-0. Then he 'coasted to an easy 6-3 second to cinch the third Michigan win. Steve Bromberg was up for the Wolverines at the number four card. He took the first set from Spartan Kieth Kimble in an easy 6-3, but Kieth came back to claim the second by the same score. With the cards down Bromberg opened up on the tire, Kimble t3 come up on the heavy end of a 6-2 third sethand number four for Michigan. OKKIE BRUMM had the most ups and downs of the day. He started hard but lost the first set to Michigan State's Dan Perillo. 6-8. But then the steady Brumm settled down, and despite a cou- ple of lapses finished things off in the longest match of the day with the final score 6-8, 8-6, 6-4. It was the number six singles where Michigan suffered her only match loss. Ross Herron for the Wolevrines played a game and seesawing match with Doug Cur- ley of the Green and Wiite with the finals adding up Mister Cur- ley E-t, 4-6, 6-4. SPARTAN COACH Frank Bee- man put Brose and MlWl.; on the spot ir front of MacKay aadnHot- zeck with the Michigan pair drop- ping the first game but rallying to take the match 3-6, 6-4, 6-3. Spartan captain Ken Kimble and brother Keith failed before the power and placements of Lin- coln and Bromberg as Michigan clipped off number seven 8-6, 6-1. Th" rumber three dotbles was called because of the late 'iur by mutual consent of the coaches. BOB OLSON ... bows out By TED PAPES Michigan chances of repeating as Big Ten golf king were given a shattering jolt yesterday when it was officially announced that the school's number one linksman, Bob Olson, will not be allowed to compete for the remainder of the season. Scholastic difficulties have caus- ed Coach Bert Katzenmeyer to sideline his ace, thus removing the backbone of his squad. As a result of this action, the Wolverines must relinquish their role of title favor- ites in the blue chip tournament scheduled for Columbus in less than two weeks. * * * WITH OLSON the club had a potent par threat in combination with balanced support right down the lineup, superior on paper, at least, to any other team in the conference. Without him, Michigan retains what must be classified as a "good" squad, but one which will have a real dogfight on its hands when it runs up against the Buckeyes of Ohio State and Purdue's Boilermakers in the showdown. The big, blond swinger from Grosse Pointe was considered a good bet to be in the running for this year's individual champion- ship, also. Now he will have to direct his efforts to school work to establish his eligibility for next season, which will be his last. * * * KATZENMEYER has nominated Keith LeClair to take over the number one, slot in match play, and the diminutive senior has re- sponded well. LeClair,, who is known as "Ish" by his teammates, is as game a player as Michigan possesses, and can be depended upon to carry the fight to his op- ponent over the entire 18 hole stretch. Golf Team Loses Olson For Remaining Contests By TED PAPES A stubborn Purdue golf team made an early two point margin stand up against the Wolverines yesterday to hand them their first links setback in seven matches. The score was 141/2 to 12%1/. * * * IT WAS A wide open affair with neither team ever in possession of a commanding advantage. The Boilermakers were able to com- mit their errors in less crucial spots than the losers, and that made the difference. When firing had ceased in three best ball morning rounds, Purdue found itself on the long end of a 51/2-32 score, thanks to somhe bungling on the 18th green by Michigan. Dick Evans and Leo HauserI swept three points from Boiler- makers Bud Marsee and Norm Dunlap to keep alive their un- usual string of doubles victories. They have not been scored upon since they began playing together four meets ago. * * * JOHN HARE and Dave Laflin retrieved those tallies for Purdue by throttling Chuck MacCaThum and John Fraser for a clean sweep. The other doubles encoun- ter went to Fred Wampler and Gene Coulter who derailed Keith LeClair and Dean Limd of the Wolverines, 2%-1/2. In the latter pairing Michi- gan could have salvaged 1 ! ex- tra points on the last hole when Wampler and his partner took bogey fives, !but LeClair and Lind leach three-putted avvy their advantage. For al! prac- tical purposes that was the turning point. With 18 points at stake in the afternoon individual m a t c h e s, Hauser and Lind were the only Woevrines equal, to the task of overhauling their opponents. Hau- ser topped Marsee, 3-0, and Lind spanked Hare 21/2-/2. F1.OM THERE on down it was all Pudue with the exception of the number three pairing in which Evans staggered to an even break with Gene Coultei. Laflin and Wampler stopped MacCalium and LeClair, 2/2-1/2, and Dunlao took two of three from Fraser. Sports' Gate Unhurtby TV MILWAUKEE-(R)-Spectator sports have nothing to fear at the gate from television, a University of Pennsylvania graduate student contended yesterday. "Television is not a major at- tendance factor," Jerry N. Jor- dan, who conducted a two-year study of the effect of telecasts on sports attendance, told the Na- tional Association of Newspaper Promotion Managers. * * * JORDAN SAID his statements were based on actual attendance figuresalldover the country-"on just about every kind of condi- tion we could find anywhere." The recent action of the West- ern Conference in banning live television of football next fall, for the protection of small college at- tendance, was challenged by Jor- dan. He said more college football was telecast in the Big Ten area a year ago than in any other see- tion-"and a higher percentage of schools increased their attendance than in any other area in the country." "Small colleges in the Western Conference television areas had an even better attendance record than in other sections," he added. 3y virtue of their semi-final tories yesterday afternoon at rry Field, Williams and Tyler uses are scheduled to clash in Same next week which will de- e the championship of the I-M sidence Hall Softball League. Williams slugged out a 10-4 vie- .y over Hayden, while Lloyd s being trounced by Tyler 11-5 yesterday's semi-finals. ndians Win n Exhibition CLFZELAND-(P) -Pinch-hit- Thurman Tucker raced in f m third on Bob Kennedy's out- Id fly to score the winning run the seventh inning tonight as e Cleveland Indians beat the ttsburgh Pirates 6 to 5 in an ';-hibition game. Wally Westlake d Ralph Kiner hit homers for e Pirates. l At Brooklyn, rain forced the stponement of a night game tween the Dodgers and the Bos- a Braves. All other Major ague teams were idle. TYLER PUSHED across seven runs on only one hit in the sec- ond inning, and went on to trim Lloyd 11-5, as a seven-run rally by the losers was erased from the books when the game was called at the end of three and one-half innings. When play was called to halt, due to lack of time, Lloyd was leading 12-11. However, the seven runs scored by Lloyd in the top half of the fourth inn- ing did not count as the score of the game reverted back to the last completed inning. With John Pieliemier pitching a four-hitter, Williams had little trouble in disposing of Haydn, 10-4. * * * THREE RUNS in the third inn- ing, aided by a home run by Harry Roberts broke a 3-3 tie for Wil- liams. Joe Stone smashed out a three- run double, a single, and stole five bases for the winners. John Rob- ertson hit a home run for Hayden, but poor fielding lost the game for them. BRANDISHING BIG BATS: Musial D. DiMaggio Lead Major Loops AREWELL BLUES: Last Minute Cuts Hit Yanks; Mize, Lindell Pillette Freed NEW YORK-(A)-The Champ- -14 z New York Yankees cut five iyers loose yesterday-two of hem. by outright sale-and they 11 haven't landed that addition- starting pitcher Manager Casey engel has been yelping for. Several of the Yanks cut loose d been dangled as "trade bait" Stengel's desperate quest of a irler. * * * NOW THE champs are down to se-inside the 25-player limit iich must be met by tomorrow midnight-and they have little Pt to offer in swap other than gorge Stirnweiss, a somewhat irtly infielder, and a spare catch- or two. Three excess Yanks, headed iy big Johnny Mize, long the error of National League pitch- ers, were shipped to the club's ransas City farm team in the 4mericar Association on a 24- tour recall basis. Duane Pillette, 26-year-old pitcher, and Al Billy) Martin, a 22-year-old nfielder tabbed for future reatness with the Yanks, ac- nmnanied Mize to the minor cost Johnny his last chance with the Yanks, who are well loaded with outfielders. * * * CLARENCE (Cuddles) Marshall, right-handed pitcher, was sold to the St. Louis Browns for an un- announced sum, possibly not in excess of $10,000. He, along with Lindell, Stirnweiss and catchers Gus Niarhos, Charlie Silvera and Ralph Houk, have been offered to other American League clubs- especially Washington-all spring in exchange for a proven pitcher. As Mize, now 37, has been in the Majors over 10 years he had to give his consent to the Kansas City deal. He could have insisted on his outright release and then tried to deal himself to another big league team. American League By The Associated Press CHICAGO-Boston's Dom Di- Maggio has taken over two Ameri- can League batting specialties in the young 1950 season. The Red Sox outfielder has col- lected the most hits, 36, and the most runs, 26, in the 24 games in which he has played. In addition his .371 batting average through games of Sunday was good for a tie for fourth place with Paul Lehner of Philadelphia. DIMAGGIO has played in more games this season than any of the other American League leaders. His teammate, Walter Dropo, was a .400 average after 14 games and stands atop the leaders' list. Larry Doby of Cleveland is in second place only four points behind with .396. Other leaders are Cliff Mapes, New York, third with .373; Walter Evers, De- troit, sixth with .367; Victor Wertz, Detroit, seventh with .364; Ed Stuart, Washington, eighth, with .352; Ed Yost, Washington, ninth with .349, and Tom Henrich, New York, tenth with .346. Three players--Red Sox Al Zar- illa and Vern Stephens and Dick Kryhoski of Detroit-are tied for most doubles, eight. Four others are tied with four triples apiece; Yankees Henrich and Mapes; Bob Doerr of Boston and Bob Dillinger of Philadelphia. * * * TED WILLIAMS of Boston has the most homers, nine. Stephens has batted in the most runs, 29, and Dillinger and Herbie Adams of Chicago are tied with three stolen bases each. Charles Stobbs of Boston is the leading pitcher with two wins and no losses. Mel Parnell of Boston and Art Houtteman of Detroit each have won four and lost one. Bob Lemon of Cleveland has the most strikeouts, 28. * * * National League Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals continued to hammer the stuffing out of the bill during the past week as he boosted his average to an astronomical .467 through Sunday's games. This represents a gain of 14 points for "The Man" and puts him 85 points ahead of his closest rival in the National League, Dick Sisler of, the sizzling Phillies. * * * MiUSIAL'S TOTAL of 35 hits is matched only by Sam Jethroe, the Boston Braves' sensational rookie outfielder. His 11 doubles are two more than have been whaled by runner-up Jackie Robinson of Brooklyn. Third behind Sisler's .382 mark comes Andy Pafko of the Chicago Cubs, who dropped abruptly from his towering av- erage of .439 only a week ago to .375. Veteran Johnny Hopp of Pitts- burgh went on a clubbing ram- page, including a 6-for-6 game, to boost his average to .363 and take over fourth place. Tommy Glavi- ano, Cardinals third baseman, tacked on 24 points and climbed into fifth with a lofty .357. * * *. JETHROE stands sixth with .343; Eddie Waitkus, Phillies, sev- enth, .330; Jackie Robinson, Brooklyn, eighth, .329; Johnny Wyrostek, Cincinnati, ninth, .328, and Del Ennis, Philadelphia, tenth, .324. The league-leading Phils not only have three batters in the se- lect group, but their Willie Jones leads in runs scored with 24 and Ennis was tops in runs batted in with 26. Sid Gordon of the Braves ham- mered his eighth home run to take the lead in that specialty, followed by Ralph Kiner of Pitts- burgh and Jones of the Phils, each with seven. Jethroe and Buddy Kerr of the Braves each had belt- ed three triples. PeeWee Reese of the Dodgers continued to lead the base stealers with five thefts. FORMALS Elegantly styled for social success! Light, crease resistant rayon N4.keeps you cool and s' comfortable. Student Pilgrimage to Europe Treat the June graduate to a pilgrimage to ROME (the Holy City), PARIS, /- FLORENCE and other famous cities $521 to $572np mum I White, pastels. ° k Not one single case of fhroat irrfation 1 3* oo P, 1, P; Thrnn 39 day itineraries sailino from NewYork MR U."Na