THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Illini MSC Golf Squads Lowly Rated Have Little Chance For BigTen Crown (Third in a Series) By DICK BUCK Unless they show much more than they have shown thus far this season, the Michigan State, Illinois, and Indiana golf squads will present little threat in the battle for the Big Ten golf crown .tomorrow and Saturday. Indiana finds itself in the best shape of the three, having at least chalked up a 4-3 record for the 1952 season. The Hoosiers' four wins, however, were all against very weak teams. They downed Detroit, Bradley, Cincinnati, and a bogged-down Illinois links squad. LOSSES FOR Indiana were to top teams, Notre Dame, Iowa, and Purdue, but prove that the Hoos- iers aren't ripe to annex a title this year. Coach Owen L. Cochrane will probably be able to boast im- provement over last year when Indiana finished last in the Conference meet. Jack Leer, Jim Callis, and Elliot x.7Phiips rate as his top golfers but they have been as inconsistent as Harold Bartholomew, Jim Balch, and Dick White, the remainder of the contingent. * . * COCHRANE has been forced to shift his order a number of times during the season, but the last time out, he used Leer in the number one spot and Callis in ' number two. A team is always dangerous on its home course, this may be the only thing that will keep Illinois out of the cellar in the coming meet. The Illini ended their season with a very unimpressive 1-6 ree- ord, dropping meets to such teams as Indiana and Bradley. WITH DEAN LIND and Dick Evan carding 146 and 147 total, the Wolverines had little trouble besting Illinois in their dual meet. Lind trounced Ken West, who toured the course in 158 and Evans stopped Capt. Vein Rascher, who carded 151. Junior Don Cassidy was med- alist in the meet with his 75-57- 150, and along with Rascher, he will constitute Coach Ralph Fletcher's chief threat in the Coinference,° Though Michigan State wound up its season with a 4-5 record, the Spartan linksmen cannot be considered in the running for top honors since they haven't won a conference dual meet all season THEY WERE edged out by Wis- consin and Illinois and were slaughtered by Michigan to the ' tune of 16-2 in one of the dual meets between the two schools. The Wolverines could manage only a 16-11 victory in the other meet but even then were shooting far off their usual pace. The mainstay of the floundering Spartans are Capt. Jack Zinn and senior Carl Mosack. Zinn lost rounds in both meets with Michi- gan but combined with Chuck Davenport to win over Evans and Lind in one of the doubles match- es. Mosack has also dropped both his singles matches against Michi- gan's golfers. Grid Ticket Sales Begin Students wishing to purchase tickets for Michigan's three away football games in 1952 may make application at the Ferry Field ticket office starting Monday, Ticket Manager Don Weir an- nounced yesterday. At the same time, Weir said, student orders for extra ducats for any of the six home contests will be taken. These orders in no way pertain to student season books, which will be given out at regis- tration this fall, Weir emphasized. Here is the 1952 grid slate: September3 27 MICHIGAN STATE .... HERE October 4 Stanford........... Palo Alto 11 INDIANA ............. HERE 18 Northwestern....... Evanston 25 MINNESOTA ...........HERE November 1 I ILLINOIS ............. HERE 8 CORNELL ............. HERE 15 PURDUE ..... HERE 22 Ohio State ........ Columbus PLATTER PUSHER: Nilsson Paces Conference Weight Men Major League Standings By The Associated Pres NATIONAL LEAGUE i AMERICAN LEAGUE FRITZ NILSSON, who is favored to take double honors in the shot put and discus throw at the Big Ten Championships to be held at Ferry Field tomorrow and Saturday. 'M' Vies for Conference NetChampionshpToa By NEIL BERNSTEIN The Michigan tennis squad will begin its final and toughest test of the year at Evanston today- the Big Ten Championships. The Conference standings will be decided entirely on the basis of this meet, which will run today, tomorrow, and Saturday. Michi- gan State, the defending cham- pion, or Indiana is favored to take the net ,crown. THE WOLVERINE team is ex- pected to either come in third trailing the Spartans and Hoos- iers, or else fourth behind Iowa. However, in a sport as individually determined as tennis is, anything can happen when the chips are down. Coach Bill Murphy has made only a few minor changes in his lineup for the Conference Finals. His singles line-up will be Al Mann at number one, Steve Bromberg in the second slot, Mike Schwartz the number three man, Gene Barrack and Jim Stephens at four and five, re- spectively, and Jim Holtz in the sixth position. Kuehn Sets Conferense Hitting Mark CHICAGO-(P)-Harvey Kuehn, sensational Wisconsin shortstop, set three Big Ten records and tied another in one of the most spec- tacular sweeps of modern Confer- ence baseball history, official sta- tistics showed today. KUEHN, WHO finished second in batting with .444, had a record 28 hits for a 15-game schedule; set a new mark in total bases with 47; .struck out only once in 63 times at bat for another record, and matched the record in three- bagger production with five. The individual batting title went to Purdue's Harold Hanes with .450 in 40 times up. The Boilermakers' took the team bat crown with .282. Harold Wallace of Purdue tied Frank Howell of Michigan in home runs with three each. GUST VERGETIS of Wisconsin drew the most walks, 11, while Don Luft of Indiana struck out the most times, 15. The most sacrifices were by Bruce Haynam of Michi- gan with five, another record. Michigan won team fielding honors with .964 while Kuehn top- ped shortstops with only two er- rors in 69 chances. IM Results Public Health 4, Psychology 2 Taylor defeated Huber (forfeit) Holtz took the sixth position in a playoff held this week between himself, Bob Curhan, and Bob Paley. Curhan defeated Paley Monday, and then lost to Holtz in two straight sets Tuesday. This playoff was caused by the an- nouncement that Jay Webb, the former number five netter, had decided to drop off the squad for the rest of the season. * * * IN THE DOUBLES, Murphy will have Bromberg and Barrack play- ing the first slot, Mann and Schwartz, the second duo, and Stephens and Paley in the third position. The actual set-up of the tour- nament will be decided by a meet- ing of the coaches to be held some- time this morning. As things stand right now, they have three pro- posals for the running of the tourney. ALSO, ANY SEEDING which is necessary will be determined at this morning's meeting. The Wolverines' best tourney hopes appear to lie in the last three singles and the doubles classes. Barrack, last year's fifth singles champ, has a good chance of adding the fourth singles laurels to his record, and also Stephens is given a good chance of going places at the fifth slot. The first doubles team's chanc- es cannot be determined as yet, since the important matter here seems to be how much the three- week lay-off has affected Steve Bromberg. However, Mann and Schwartz did a very fine job at first slot in Bromberg's absence, and should make a fine showing in the sec- ond position. Stephens and Paley seem to stack up with the best of the third doubles teams. (Sixth and last in a series of art- cles dealing with tie Western Con- ference outdoor track and field cham- pionships to be held at Ferry Field May 30-31.) By DAVE LIVINGSTON With the favorite, or at least co-favorite, in four of the five field events, Michigan's chances to cop the title in the forthcoming Big Ten track and field meet won't rest entirely on the cinder paths. Ace weight-man Fritz Nilsson heads the talented crop of Wol- verines who cavort inside the oval track. * * * THE BIG Swede will be out to overthrow defending champion Bob Carey, Michigan State's All- American gridder, in the shot put. The Spartan won the event last year with a 53-foot toss, but this spring he heaved the shot 53 feet, eleven inches for his best effort to date. Nilsson, however, has a top mark of 54 feet, five and one- half inches outdoors. He took last winter's conference indoor meet with a 53 foot, seven and three-fourths inch performance. Former Maize and Blue great Charlie Fonville holds the confer- ence record of 56 feet, five inches, which he set in the 1948 outdoor championships. AMONG OTHER shot putters who have been showing well are Mary Berschet of Illinois and Mi- chigan State's Don Schiesswohl, in addition to Wolverine Tom John- son. Johnson is a 50-footer while the others are approaching this mark. With a discus in his hand Nilsson stands in a class by him- self. The Swedish star's best throw of 169 feet, one-half inch exceeds by more than ten feet the top efforts of such men as Berschet, George Holm of Min- nesota, Clyde Gardner of Iowa, and teammate Roy Pella. Last year's winning toss of 153 feet, three inches was turned in by Indiana's Clifton Anderson, who will not be back to defend his title, The Intramural Building will be closed on Friday and Satur- day, May 30 and 31, due to the Big Ten Track Meet. -Earl Riskey while the Big Ten record of 178 feet, eleven and one-half inches was established by Fortune Gor- dien of Minnesota in 1948. IN THE high jump Ron Mitchell of Illinois and Michigan's Milt Mead will resume a personal duel that has seen Mead win twice, Mitchell once, and one tie. Mitchell came out on top on their first meeting when he cap- tured the conference indoor crown, but since that time, which was Mead's first var- sity meet, the lanky Wolverine hasn't been whipped by his riv- al. The two tied for the victory in their last clash at six feet, five and five-eighths inches, in the Mi- chigan-Illinois dual meet. They CUSTOM HAIRSTYLING for woner and children 5 STYLISTS At Your Convenience The Daseola Barbers Liberty Near State each have been consistently bet- tering the best performances of defending champion Jim Harper of Indiana. * * * WOLVERINE Horace Coleman and Ohio State's freshman sensa- tion Bill Hairston should put on quite a battle for the first place points in the broad jump. Coleman, however, is probably a slight favorite to add the out- door title to the one he grabbed indoors last winter with a leap of twenty-two feet, eleven and three-fourths inches. The Buck- eye neophyte didn't participate in the indoor festivities. Art Kurtz of Northwestern and Stan Levinson of Iowa, along with Wolverines Jack Rose and Lowell Perry, will be putting in strong bids to place in the event. Illini Dick Coleman and Dick Calisch, who finished one-two in the indoor championships, appear to have the pole vault pretty tight- ly sewed up. Both have been clear- ing better than fourteen feet. 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