TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE MMO Il 'huts Out Notre Dame 3-0 for Fifth in a Row .. * * * * Corbett Yields but Five Hits In HoldingIrish Scoreless Haynam and Leach Lead Wolverine Attack; Michigan Meets Detr By PAUL GREENBERG Sophomore right-anderJack Corbett may very well prove to be' the answer to Coach Ray Fisher's Lquest for a dependable starting hurler. hu Corbett pitching superb base- ball, chalked up his third consecu- tive shutout yesterday, blanking Notre Dame 3-0 while allowing only five hits. It was the Wolver- jines' fifth win in a row and they have yet tobe scored upon at home this season. TODAY the Diamond squad faces the Titans of Detroit Uni- versity with Dick Yirkosky, south- paw hurler due to go against Sam Cippronne in a game starting at 3:30 at Ferry Field. Michigan had a comparatively . easy time against the Fighting Irish from South Bend. Corbett Hurst Elected Don Hurst was elected cap- tain of the Michigan gymnas- tic team last night at a dinner honoring the squad. Harry Luchs was named Most Valu- able Performer. roit Nine Here 'Today traditionally lucky home half of the seventh Michigan kicked up its heels again. Haynam was the instigator, leading things off by drawing a walk. Then Bill Mosk, Wolverine first baseman had his bat tip- ped by the Notre Dame catcher and went down to first, Haynam taking over second. Billings, up next, choked up as if to bunt and slapped a hard single through the drawn-in infield in- to left field, Haynam scoring while Mogk went to third and Billings took second on the throw to the plate. Cleanup batter Don Eaddy step- ped up and teed off on a fast ball, slamming a long liner to cen- ter on which Ridge made a spark- ling catch. Mogk tagged up and scored on the fly and Billings went tt, third but was stranded there as Lepley popped out to second and Fancher hit another liner straight at Ridge. The game again included a po- tent attack by the Wolverines, all told the team knocked out nine hits, catcher Dick Leach getting three, including two screaming doubles with Haynam and Bill- ings each batting out a pair of -Daily-Jim Parker MAKES IRISH STEW-Sophomore hurler Jack Corbett allowed only five hits as he whitewashed Notre Dame, 3-0. This marked the third shutout of the season for the crafty right-hander. Golf Scoring Rev iewoed* ' Prepares for U ofP pitched a crafty if not over- powering game, allowing only three men to reach third, giving three walks and striking out four. The Wolverines scored enough runs to win in the first inning when lead-off man Bruce Haynam bounced a single off the chest of the Irish third baseman, went to third on center fielder Bill Billings hard line single, and scored when f he- and Billings collaborated on a double steal. .* s FROM HERE on until the sev- enth nothing but goose eggs went up on the scoreboard, but in the 11----------------------------- Big Ten Net Play Begins This Friday The Big Ten's 1952 dual tennis campaign gets under way Friday with Indiana at Ohio State and Wisconsin at Iowa, while Michi- gan's netters open here against the Hoosiers Saturday. Here's how outfits shape up on the eve of Conference openers: * * * MICHIGAN STATE: Undefeat- ed in dual competition last year and Conference champion by four points over Michigan, the Spar- tans are hunting replacements for Leonard Brose, Big Ten singles shamp, and Wally Kau, number two man. Coach John Friedrich says he isn't too worried, because he has added Stan Drobac, Milwaukee, and Doug Curley, Detroit, two capable performers, to take up the slack. With Captain Pancho Sah- ratian, veterans Keith Kimble and Dick Rieger round out the MSC squad that figures to be tough to dethrone. IOWA: Surprise third in the Conference in '51, the Hawkeyes "to date appear better than last year, with lack of experience the biggest weakness," said Coach Don Klotz. Bruce Higley, champ at Number 4 singles, is the top returning vet- eran, backed by lettermen Roger IKroth, Bob Richards, and Gordon Chapman. Dusty Rice, Iowa grid star, is a promising prospect. Rice was state high school singles champion two years in a row. * *~ * INDIANA: Loss of Captain Jim Shannon, Number 2 singles, and Bob Masters, Number 4 man, willz be felt. Heading the Hoosiers in '52 are Captain Bob Burnham, lastt year's Number 1 player, and Elit Glazer, who as a sophomore wast undefeated and won the Number 3 singles title. All other positions are widet open, with the squad expected to be stronger in the lower rankingse than last year, when the Hoosiers finished in a tie for fourth with Illinois.f NORTHWESTERN: Led by ace Dan Baumle, four returning let- termen, and several promising sophomores make the Wildcats hopeful of improving last year's sixth place Big Ten finish. * * * WISCONSIN: Practicing under a temporary coach, the 1952 Bad- gers are a question mark. Seniors Jim DeLoye and Ken Ohm are the best of four lettermen return- ing from last season's seventh place Big Ten team. Last year Michigan trounced the Madison team, 8-1, in a dual meet here. Michigan's dual schedule in- cludes meets with all the fore- mentioned teams except Iowa, plus one each with Illinois and Ohio State. The Buckeyes didn't score a point in last year's Con- ference meet. NATIONAL W Brooklyn......... 5 Cincinnati....... 4 Chicago.......... 4 St. Louis.........3 New York........ 3 Boston...........3 Philadelphia .... 2 Pittsburgh ..... 2 LEAGUE L Pct. 1 .833 2 .667 2 .667 3 .500 3 .500 4 .429 5 .287 6 .250 Major League Standings Washington Edges Red Sox; Yankees DownPhiladelphia Raschi Hurls as Yanks Finally Beat Shantz; Moreno in Second One-Run Win Over Sox TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Brooklyn (2, twi-night) -Wilson (0-0) and Surkont (0-1) or Conley (0-1) vs. Van Cuyk (1-0) and Roe (1-0). New York atrPhiladelphia (night)- Jansen (0-0) or Hearn (0-0) vs. Meyer (0-1). Chicago at Pittsburgh (night) - Rush (0-0) vs. Friend (1-0). St. Louis at Cincinnati (night) - MizelL (0-0) vs. Raffensberger (1-0). AMERICAN LEAGUE w Cleveland........:7 Boston.......... 6 St. Louis.........5s Washington .--4 New York........ 3 Chicago .. ....2 Philadelphia .... 1 Detroit...........o L 2 3 3 5 6 7 Pet. 1.000 .750 .714 .571 .500 .287 .143 .000 GB - Al 2 3 5 51 7 bingles. The box score: GB 1 4 4 r NOTRE DAME- AB R HPO A, Colloton, 2b .... 3 0 1 3 1J Ridge, cf. ...... 4 0 0 3 0 Mutscheller, If. 4 0 0 2 0 Gibbons, rf... 3 0 0 2 0 Rosenthal, lb 3 0 0 7 0 Costigan, 3b ... 4 0 1 1 4 Reilly, ss....... 3 0 0 2 2 Farrell, c....... 3 0 0 4 0 Reynolds, p .... 2 0 1 0 1 a-Ledwidge ... 1 0 1 0 0 b-Bujnowski . 1 0 1 0 0 c-Durkin...... 0 0 0 0 0 d-Gaberik .... 1 0 0 0 0 TOTALS .......32 0 5 24 7 a-singled for Rosenthal in ninth b-singled for Reilly in ninth c-walked for Farrell in ninth d-struck out for Reynolds in ninti E 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 th MICHIGAN- AB R T PC s r' k i ,. The Michigan Crew-Cut. Try an Expertly Styled Collegiate Crew 9 Barbers - No Waiting The Daseola Barbers Liberty k/ear State Haynam, ss .... 4 Mogk, lb........5 Billings, cf.4.... Eaddy, 3b ......4 Lepley, If. ......3 Fancher, rf..... 4 Sabuco, 2b. .... 4 Leach, c........ 4 Corbett, p ...... 3 TOTALS ..... .35 z 1 0 0 0 4 8 0 9 2 1 z 1 0 0 0 3 0 9 x 2 3 2 1 0 0 1 00 26 0 50 0 1 2 2 0 5 3 9 2 By LEONARD WHITE As Michigan's golf team pre- pares for its home opener against the University of Detroit tomor- row, it might be helpful to the followers of this spring sport if the inter-collegiate scoring system were elucidated upon. Such scores as 191-71 may be mystifying to the layman who is acustomed to tabulating his efforts in terms of the number of strokes taken. ACTUALLY THERE are two systems in use by the Big Ten, the Nassau "System and that of medal play. The Nassau Sytem is used by collegss for scoring a meet. It is based entirely on match' play. Under it a player may score a maximum of three points toward his team's total in an 18-hole round. If a Wolverines were leading his opponent in holes after the first nine, he will have earned one point. If he and his opponent should. win an equal number, he will get x point as does his oppon- ent. * * * THE SAME RULE applies to the second nine. In addition, the play-a er who holds the edge for the total 18 holes receives another point. Again 1 point is scored in case of a split. These matches allow six play- ers from each school to partici- pate. Each man is paired in a round of singles competition to open the meet, so a team has the opportunity to tally 18 points by sweeping each nine holes. Once the singles competition is completed the play switches to doubles, and the six players of each team split up into three sets. For example, Dean Lind and Dick Evans may be paired against the two top players of the opposition. AT THE END of the first hole, the lowest Wolverine score is com- pared with the best one turned in by either opponent, and the hole is awarded to the lowest of the three. Again a point goes to the lead- ing team at the end of each nine and 18, and for the total 18. Now, however, a team can earn a maxi- mum of nine points, since it has only three doubles combinations in action. * * * THE Western Conference cham- pionship is awarded on an entirely different basis, that of medal play. Each school enters six men to play 72 holes each. The scores are tabulated, and each school selects its five lowest scores. TODAY'S GAMES} Philadelphia at New York-Martin (0-1) vs. Sain (0-0). Washington at Boston-Haynes (0- 0) vs. Henry (1-0). Cleveland at St. Louis (night) - Garcia (1-0) vs. Byrne (1-0). Detroit at Chicago-Gray (0-1) vs. Stobbs (0-1). I-M BRIEFS Delta Sigma Delta overpowered Alpha Kappa Kappa in the finals of the professional fraternity water polo tournament yesterday, 4-0. JERRY BOWER, who tallied twice, gave the winners a 1-0 half- time lead by scoring shortly after the contest got under way. Delta Sigma Delta then broke the game wide open in the second stanza as Bower and Clyde Brash- er countered early in the period and then Chuck Murray added icing to the cake by notching the final goal with seconds remaining. SOFTBALL SCORES Anderson 17, Wenley 6 Tyler 9, Adams 7 Hayden 11, Williams S Lloyd 18, Cooley 4 Chicago 12, van Tyne 9 Michigan 8, Reeves 5 Strauss 14, Huber 1 Winchell 9, Fletcher 0 (Forfeit) By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Vic Raschi con- tinued his mastery over Philadel- phia yesterday, pitching the New York Yankees to a 5-1 victory over the Athletics and giving the world champions an even .500 rating for their first six games of the season. The powerful righthander was- n't there at the finish, but he stayed around long enough. * * * BOBBY SHANTZ, the little left- hander who whipped the Yankees in his last three starts against them in 1951 and had beat them in his only previous start against them this season, hurled well enough to win most games. His defense, however, fell apart be- hind him as two glaring errors handed the Yankees three un- earned runs. Shantz permitted the Yanks only five hits in the six innings he worked before bowing out for a pinch hitter, but one of them was Mickey Mantle's first homer of the campaign in the first inning. The A's managed seven hits off Raschi, who also walked six and hit one batter. However, they left 10 runners stranded and hit into four double plays. THE A'S ONLY RUN came in the second inning when Gus Zer- nial singled, stole second and scored when Ferris Fain singled. When Philadelphia filled the bases against Raschi in the eighth on a single by Fain and two bases on balls, Bob Kuzava came in and retired Skeeter Kell on a fly to Mantle for the third out. NATS 3, RED SOX 2 BOSTON-Julio Moreno's clutch pitching and pinch-hitter Sam Mele's long fly to center with the bases loaded in the eighth gave the Washington Senators a 3-2 win over the Boston Red Sox yes- terday at Fenway Park. Moreno is the only pitcher to de- feat the Sox this year and this was his second one-run victory. He defeated them in Washington last week, 4-3, in 11 innings. A RHUBARB developed in the Six fifth over a decision by umpire Joe Paparella that resulted in 'manager Lou Boudreau being ejected from the game for the first time as a Red Sox pilot. The Sox opened the inning with Dom Domaggio getting hit by a pitch. Jim Piersall singled him to second. Don Lenardt scored Domaggio with a sharp single to left with Piersall stop- ping at second. Vern Stephens advanced both runners with a sacrifice bunt and Walt Dropo singled to left to score Piersall. Faye Throneberry then smashed a line single into'right apparently scoring Lenhardt and sending Dropo to third. BUT PAPARELLA ruled, on an appeal, that Dropo had been hit by the batted ball, and the fire- works started. Dropo and then Boudreau pro- tested vehemently. Boudreau was thumbed out of the game and Lenhardt was ordered back to third as Dropo was called out. NIGHT BASEBALL New York (N) 10, Philadelphia 4 Chicago (N) 7, Pittsburgh 1 STUDENT SUPPLIES Typewriters Repaired Rented Sold Bought Webster-Chicago Tape and Wire Recorders Fountain Pens Repaired by a Factory Trained Mads 314 s. State Ph. 717 exclusive!, the only summer formal with Notre Dame ....000 000 000 Michigan......100 000 20x r /21 C "' .... S w Pper Take Advantage of our special 2-Hour Drop-Off Service. 75c for an 8 V2 lb. Bundle. 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As one of the nation's largest, most progressive bank and trust companies, we need college men for such varied activi- ties as market-research, sales, management and invest- ment of trust funds, purchase and sale of government and municipal bonds, advertising, public relations, per. sonnel management and investment and credit research. If you. have poise, a pleasant personality and believe you will enjoy contacts with leading business men, The Northern Trust Company offers you exceptional oppor- tunities. You will work with friendly people in modern, pleasant surroundings in the heart of Chicago, the second largest city in the nation and the center of highly diversified industry, commerce, transportation and finance. Draft eligibility does not eliminate you from consideration. Investigate these opportunities. Contact Professor C. L. 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