I / THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Irish Down M' Nine In Tenth MAJOR-LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Tigers Rip Nats 12-4; Tie for Second Wolverine Golfers Lose To U-P Titans 14 -/12 Evans, Fraser Outstanding for Michigan; Koscis and Novitsky Lead Detroit Team * * Costly Error Gives N-D Hard-Fought 6-5 Victory Special to The Daily ,DETROIT-The University of Detroit Titans made it two-out- of-two against Michigan yesterday when they edged the Wolverine linksmen, 14/-121/2, at the Red Run Golf Club here. Earlier this spring, the Wolver- ines had dropped a 15-12 match to these same Titans over the Michi- gan course. * * * THE SIX Maize and Blue golfers averaged almost 79 strokes per 18- hole round to 78 for each Titan. In "Well I'll Be ..." A prospective Wolverine freshman football player was being escorted around the cam- pus last week but did not seem to be greatly impressed until he came to the stadium.h "Gosh!" he exclaimed as he gazed about the vast empty am- phitheater. "How many people can get into this place?" "This stadium holds almost 98,000 people," replied his es- cort. The kid looked at him and said: "You mean - sitting down?" their 131%-13/2 tie with North- western a week ago, the six Wol- verines averaged only 72.33 strokes and last Saturday they averaged' 75 strokes to earn them victories over Michigan State and Ohio State. The Wolverines had originally been scheduled to play the Ti- tans next Monday, but the meet was moved back to yesterday when it was learned that Patty Berg, famous woman golfer, would give an exhibition over the Michigan course Monday. Medalist for the Wolverines was captain Dick Evans, who shot a par-72 on 9-hole rounds of 37 and 35. ** * FOR THE TITANS Sam Koscis again won laurels. The veteran Detroit linksman also shot a 72 on rounds of 37 and 35. Koscis played in the number 1 spot for Detroit, Evans in number 3 for, Michigan. Bob Olson shot, a 77, fading badly on the back nine for a 42 after shooting 35 on the front nine. Dean Lind carded 78, but the best the Wolverine duo could do was garner 3 out of 9 points from Koscis and Tony Novitsky, who shot 75. Evans and John Fraser played in the second foursome for Michigan against Don Nelson and Dave Fitz- patrick. Evans' par performance, and a 77 by Fraser gave Michigan a clean sweep of the 9 points. NELSON and Fitzpatrick carded 78 and 84, respectively. Thus through the first four singles on each team, the Wolverines led, 12-6. But experience proved the deter- mining factor in the number 5 and 6 spots. Sophomores Lowell Le- Clair and Hugh Wright skied to rounds of 84 and 85, respectively, against their Titan foes. IHip-hip hooray, Hup-hup-hup, May 23, GARG coming up! DUANE HEGEDORN . .. Impressive in loss Name Sports Niht Ed itors Appointments to junior sports staff positions were announced Monday by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Named to seven sports night editor posts were John Jenks, '53, Park Ridge, Illinois; Bob Lan- downe, '52, Brooklyn; Gene Mac- kevich, '53, Chicago; Herb Neil, '52, Schnectady, New York; Bob Rosenman, '53, Chicago; Dick Se- well, '53, Toledo; and Ed Whipple, '53, Plymouth. The new night editors will officially assume their positions effective September, 1951. Broker Buys Browns' Stock ST. LOUIS-(P)-Mark C. Stein- berg, an investment broker, an- nounced yesterday that he has purchased a note involving the controlling interest of the St. Louis Browns with the idea of helping keep the club in St. Louis. The broker said in a statement that the note, purchased from for- mer owner Richard C. Muckerman of the Browns, "Secondary to the note held by the American League, has as security the controlling stock in the St. Louis Browns, owned by William O. and Charles Deweitt." Special to The Daily SOUTH BEND--The Fighting Irish lived up to their name here 'yyesterday, as the Notre dame base- ball squad rallied to squeak past Michigan, 6-5. Notre Dame pitcher Jean Ferry- man received credit for the victory. He relieved Stan Konopke on the mound in the ninith inning. WOLVERINE pitcher Duane Hegedorn was saddled with the loss, although turning in an im- pressive performance. After going in for starter Bob Larsen in the fifth, he pitched four hitless inn- ings. Hegedorn walked three and fanned three. Notre Dame came to bat in the bottom of the ninth, behind 5-4. Irish right fielder lIat O'Neil led off and reached first on an error. Left fielder Joe Pfaff sacrificed, advancing O'Neil to second. Ferry- man struck out, and shortstop Harry Durkin proceeded to smack out a single, O'Neil sliding into home plate with the tying run. * * * CAME THE Irish half of the tenth, and the score was still knot- ted. Catcher Tom Boland drew a walk, and was sacrificed to second by Pete Gillis. Notre Dame center fielder Jack Manning popped out to Michigan first baseman Al Wey- gandt. O'Neil hit a high fly to left fielder Leo Koceski, who dropped the ball and the game with it, Boland scoring from sec- ond. Michigan broke into the scoring column in the second inning as sec- ond baseman Gil Sabuco singled after successive walks to Gerry Dorr and Bill Mogk. * * * THE BIG INNING for the Wol- verines was the sixth. Weygandt doubled, then scored on Dorr's three base smash. Mogk singled and Dorr went home. Second base- man Gil Sabuco liit another single, Mogk reaching third. Hegedorn forced Sabuco but Mogk scored. Frank Howell beat out a bunt, but shortstop Bruce Haynam hit into a double play. Michigan got three runs on four hits in that Inning. The Irish got ,three runs in the second inning, then one in the third. Neither team was impressive statistically, as both got eight hits troit Titans MICHIGAN Howell cf Haynam ss Koceski If Palmer c Weygandt Dorr 31b Mogk rf Sabuco 2b xBilings Larsen p yfarrington Hegedorn p TOTALS x batted foi S. v * * * BOX SCORE AB R H PO 4 0 1 5 4 0 0 0 r 3 0 0 1 16 5 1 1 6 4 1 2 1 4 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 n 1 0 0 0 3l 5 129 )r Sabuco in 10th A 0 3 0 0 0 1 6 1 ai and made three errors. Two of the Wolverine errors were directly re- sponsible for the tying run in the ninth and the winning one in the tenth. Today the Michigan squad goes to Detroit to play a non-league contest with the University of De- y batted for Larsen in; NOTRE DAME AB Durkin ss 5 Manning, R 2b 3 Costigan 2b 1 LeRose 3b 2{ Foley 3b 21 Boland c 3 Gillis lb 4 Ridge of 2 Manning. .J r 2 O'Neill rf 5 Cunningham if ? Pfaff if 1{ Konopka p 21 Ferryman p 1 TOTALS 35 ,3rd E 0 t . 0 1 0 0 0 3 By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Detroit maul- ed four Washington pitchers for 14 hits and climbed into a second place tie with a 12-4 victory . be- hind Hal Newhouser's 9-hit pitch- ing last night. Vic Wertz and Pat Mullin led the Tigers' assault with three hits each, while Steve Souchock slam- med an eight-inning homer off Joe Haynes after Wertz walked. Sam Mele belted the Senators into a 2-0 lead in the first inn- ing with a home rurf after Eddie Yost doubled, but Detroit got two runs in the second off Sandy Con- suegra on a walk and four sin- gles. * * * REDS 1, BRAVE 0 CINCANNATI -Ewell Black- well allowed only one hit as he blanked the Boston Braves 1 to 0. He and Vern Bickford hooked up in one of the tightest pitching duels in many years. Bickford allowed only two hits. The blow that killed off Bick- ford was a home run by catcher John Pramesa in the seventh inn- ing. The only other Cincinnati hit was a double by Connie Ryan after Bickford had hurled 51/3 inn- ings of hitless ball. PIRATES 7, GIANTS 3 PITTSBURGH-George Strick- land's bat hammered out two homers and a single, drove in five runs and gave the Pittsburgh Piratesaa 7-3victory over the * * * Tigers, Chisox Trade Hurlers CHICAGO-(AP)-The White Sox last night traded lefthander Bob Cain to the Detroit Tigers for pitcher Saul Rogovin, a 205-pound righthander. There was no cash in- volved in the exchange. The 26-year-old Cain compiled a 9-12 record for the Sox in 1950 and had a 1-2 mark for this season. Rogovin, 27, appeared in 11 games for Detroit last year and had a 2-1 record. He has a 1-1 mark so far this campaign. New York Giants before 25,8381 last night at Forbese Field. * * * BROWNS 11, A's 8 PHILADELPHIA-The St. Louis Browns won a free-swinging bat- tle from the Philadelphia Ath- letics last night, 11-8, as the two teams rapped out three homers, three triples and the same num- ber of doubles. S* * * DODGERS 8, CUBS 4 CHICAGO-Duke Snider's bas- es-loaded homer in the seventh, two circuit wallops by league- leader Gil Hodges and another by Jackie Robinson swept the pace- setting Brooklyn Dodgers to an 8-4 victory over the Chicago Cubs yesterday. * * * WHITE SOX 9, BOSOX 7 BOSTON-Nelson Fox poled a Makes a Man Love a Pipe and a woman Love a Man R 0 2 0 0 U U I i. U 0 6 HI 1 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 8; PO A E 2 4 2 2 2 0 0 1 0 10 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 5 0 0 0 0 30 14 3 100 0-5 001 1-6 .. 4> ~j Michigan..........010 003 Notre Dame ........031 0001 . IM BRIEFS two-run homer in the 11th inn. ing-the first of his major league career-to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 9-7 triumph over the Boston Red Sox. * *C D* 4 PHIL S 5, CARDS 4 ST. LOUIS-A pinch single by Bill Nicholson with the bases loaded in the top of the ninth gave the Philadelphia Phils the necessary two runs to hand the St. Lous ,Cardinals a 5 to4 defeat last night. I.F.C. BALL PICTURES TODAY In Administration Building ---- SENIORS! Graduation Announcements ... at . . FOLLETT'S State Street at North University I ON THE SHORE OF LAKE MICHIGAN e OLD TRAIL INN HARBOR SPRINGS, MICHIGAN A Modern Inn on the shore of beautiful Lake Michigan with the hospitality, atmosphere, cuisine and friendliness of an Old Fashioned Inn Attractive Guest Cottages - American Plan A distinctly Family Resort HONEYMOONERS WELCOME fi II Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE New York Chicago Detroit Washington Cleveland Boston Philadelishia St. Louis W 17 13 13 13 12 12 7 7 L 8 9 9 10 10 11 18 19 Pet. .680 .591 .591 .565 .545 .522 .280 .269 GB 2z2 21/ 3 3Y2 4 10 10%/ Brooklyn Boston Pittsburgh Philadelphia Chicago Cincinnati St. Louis New York W 15 15 13 13 12 12 11 13 L 10 12 12 14 13 14 13 16 Pet. .600 .556 .520 .481 .480 .462 .458 .448 GB 4. . 2 3 31 34 3 4 Phi Sigma Delta, Sigma Phi Ep- silon, Chi Psi, and Phi Delta Theta advanced to the semi-finals of the fraternity softball first-place play- offs yesterday in intramural play. The Phi Sigs combined good clutch hitting and six-hit pitching by Morrie Baker to defeat Beta Theta Pi, 6 to 1. Phi Sig scored four runs in the third ininng, when Larry Sperling hit a single to drive in two runs, and then came home himself on a home run by Bill Blumenthal. SIG EPS scored in every inning but the fourth to turn back Theta Xi, 6 to 3. Bob Schmidt pitched masterful six-hit ball, keeping the Theta Xis under control in every inning but the fourth, when they scored their only, three runs. The Chi Psis capitalized on wild pitching by Irv Tobocman and some shoddy SAM fielding to win over Sigma Alpha Mu, 7 to 4. The Chi Psi defense was excellent, giving more than ade- quate support to the five-hit pitching of Roy Nelson. Phi Delta Theta had to come from behind to edge out Pi Lambda Phi, 7 to 6, in the other first-place quarter-final playoff. In ยข other fraternity softball games played yesterday, Kappa Sigma defeated Alpha Delta Phi, 10 to 1, to gain a berth in the sec- ond-place semi-final playoffs; Zeta Beta Tau chalked up a win over Acacia, 15 to 0; and Triangle de- feated Sigma Pi, 7 to 6. Both of the last two games were in the fourth- place playoffs. 4A OPENS JUNE 18 Regular and Special Business Courses Secretarial, Accounting, Civil Service. Finishing Course for Com- mercial Students. Pre - college Typewriting and Shorthand. Typing for younger boys and girls. Don't test one brand alone ..compare them all! Unlike others, we never ask you The Thoroughbred of Pip# Tobaccos Choice white Burley . Smooth and mild _'mant'r brand alone. Wae suy 1 T9DAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Please write: THE OLD TRAIL INN New York - Phone 785W1 HARBOR SPRINGS -U II 1 .1 I I 1 I ~1 I - - - - - - - - - - - how to keep off the stag line... "it, i ,.,,..,...;:y; . . .. 'fJ.: . ,' :: i'!" ~ . "ri ': l I. 1 Wynn (2-3) vs. Raschi (5-1). Chicago at Boston - Dobson (1-0) vs. Stobbs (3-0). St. Louis atiPhiladelphia - (night) -Fannin (0-2) vs. Cole- man (0-2). Detroit at Washington - (night)-Hutchinson (2-0) vs. Sima (1-2). TODAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at Chicago-Erskine (1-3) vs. Minner (1-2). New York at Pittsburgh - (night)-Hearn (2-2) vs. Muir (0-2). Boston at Cincinnati Sain (1-4) vs. Raffensberger (1-3) or Wehmeier (1-2). Philadelphia at St. Louis - (night)-Church (2-2) vs. Sta- ley (4-3). TO 5~iamis onlw - c~ilP~ PHLIP MORRIS. ..matCh II-r..0 fi P%flDUC n2_112 toMnRRIS* ,Ooudge VHILIII"IIJKIlj I againt ~yother cigarette! yourown choice! Then makey ,.---r r M SAVE AT SAM'S STORE U.S. NAVY irty 3i15 TEST! Tak. a PHILIP MORRIS - anda o!ther cigarette. Then, hera a you do;:> Light up either cigarette. Take a puff.-don't inhale--and s-1-o-w- -y let the smoke come through your nose. Now do exactly the some thing 2 with the other cigarette. 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