WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Pita is ,.S 111l Softball Tilts ATO Wins; SAE Loses To PhiSigs By TED KAUFMAN Sunshine finally made its ap- pearance at the South Ferry Field diamonds. With this boost from the weath- erman, a full slate of I-M softball games was played yesterday. The day's biggest margin of victory was rolled up by Pi Lambda Phi, who defeated Alpha Delta Phi 14-0 behind the one-hit pitching of Jerry Hirsch. THE PHI SIGMA Delta-Sigma Alpha Epsilon game ended with the score 4-2 in favor of the Phi Sigs. SAE protested the outcome on the grounds that the Phi Sigs did not use reasonable speed in aiding an injured played off the field in the fifth inning. An official decision on the game is forthcom- ying. Irv Toboeman survived a touch of first inning wildness and settled down to pitch Sigma Apha Mu to a 5-1 win over Theta Delta Chi. Three of the four Sammy hits were garnered t by short-stop Warren Werthei- mer who also sparked the team afield. Alpha Tau Omega turned back Phi Gamma Delta '13-1, behind the one-hit pitching of Bill Mon- roe. The ATO's tallied nine times The 'U' Club will hold its spring dance this Friday at the University Golf Course from 9- 12. Johnny Harberd and his or- chestra will provide the mu- sic. All 'M' Club members are invited, Laurie LeClaire in the first inning and four in the second. The Phi Gams lone hit was a double in the second inning which was eventually turned into their run. HENRY HEIL pitched Phi Delta Theta to a 12-2 triumph over Phi Sigma Kappa and Dave Bach also was victorious, pitching Theta Xi to a 5 to 2 win over Tau Delta Phi. Gene Curtis pitched a creditable game for the losers, giving up only three safeties. Top scorer for the day was Delta Kappa Epsilon, who rolled up a 15-8 win over Zeta Psi. The DKE's piled up nineteen hits y and got a record-tying four home runs In the first frame. Dick Aster hurled for the vic- tors and Jack Chesborough for the loosers. Two scores of 12-1 were recorded yesterday. In one, Lambda Chi Alpha behind Jay Casemier had the twelve and Phi Kappa Sigma with Russ Rescorla twirling had the lone marker. * s IN THE OTHER 12-1 game, Sigma Phi was victorious over Del- ta Sigma Phi. Bruce Coleman notched the win and Hugh Kabat was charged with the defeat. Rounding out the day's soft- ball activity, Beta Theta Pi won its game with Theta Chi 10-7. In the semi-finals of the frater- nity water polo tourney, Sigma Phi Epsilon whipped Chi Phi 2-1. One faculty volleyball game was held in which AFROTC beat Business Administration 4-2. Other I-M Scores Professional Fraternity Softball Psi Omega 8, Alpha Chi Sigma 4 Phi Delta Phi 14, Alpha Kap- pa 12 Residence Halls Horseshoes Lloyd 3, Adams 0 Hayden 2, Gomberg 1 Taylor 2, Hinsdale 1 HUGH WRIGHT . .. captain debuts Netters Prep For Opener Spring showers and a cold spell complete with snowstorm have limited Michigan's netters since they started outdoor practices im- mediately after spring vacation. Coach Bill Murphy expressed the sentiment that, "the team is com- ing into shape fairly well," but said that with so few outdoor ses- sions he had not yet formed any definite ideas on who his starting lineup will be in next Tuesday's opener. THE squad scrimmaged Wayne University's team Saturday in an informal meeting but has encoun- tered no other opposition to date.. This weekend's final warmup will feature a tournament simi- lar to the round-robin played indoor before vacation. It will probably determine to a large extent Murphy's final decision. Experimentation with different combinations for doubles play was begun yesterday and will be in- tensified over the weekend along with the singles play. A bright spot in the tennis pic- ture may be provided by Dave Mills, who showed up at practice last week. Mills was number three man at Michigan State two sea- sons ago and became ineligible to play when he transferred to Mich- igan last year. Michigan Li U of D in H By HANLEY GURWIN If yesterday's springlike weather stays around for at least one more day, Michigan's golf squad will fi- nally get to meet a sample of, northern competition when the linksters engage the University of Detroit Titans in a dual meet at the University Golf Course here this afternoon. The match will start at 1:30 p.m. THE WOLVERINE'S first look. at Big Ten competition had to be delayed when snow forced the cancellation of the Ohio State, Purdue. Indiana, 'and Michigan quadrangular meet scheduled for Columbus, Ohio, last Saturday. Coach Bert Katzenmeyer plans on using the same line-up to- day that he intended to use last Saturday at Columbus. Veteran Lowell LeClair will play in the number one position with Bud Stevens holding down the num- ber two slot. Warren Gast will probably play in the number three spot with Captain Hugh Wright, J a c k Stumpfig, and Tad Stanford hold- ing down positions four, five, and six respectively. THE TITANS, under the tute- lage of Professor William Joyce, have been having troubles of their own this year. While the weather man has been a little kinder, the opposition has not . Against other Big Ten competition, the Titans have been soundly beaten by Pur- due, Indiana, and Northwestern. Holding down the number one position for the Titans will prob- ably be Captain Mike Andonian, who is now playing in his third year as a member of the De- troit squad. Ranking high on the Detroit roster is junior Bill Huetteman, winner of last year's Fisher Golf Tournament. Huetteman is much improve'd over last year and should be one of the dependable perform- ers for the Titans this year. OTHER members of the U. of D. squad include sophomore Ron Stelter, who pulled a surprise by beating last years captain Tony Novitsky by four strokes to win this year's Fisher Tournament, Ray Maisevich, a promising sophomore from Redford High School in De- I J">e nksters Face ame Opener troit, and Ray Conlon, a sopho- more who received some experience last year as a freshman. Despite the poor showing to date of the Titans, Coach Kat- zenmeyer is not overly confident of winning the match, the first for his squad sinceethe spring trip. The cold weather has pro- hivited the extensive practice sessions which are so necessary to a golfers early season prog- ress. Since 1944, when the Wolverines began playing the University of Detroit on an annual basis, the Maize and Blue have turned back Professor Joyce's linksmen on 13 occasions while losing only twice. (Second in a Series) \ Wisconsin and Michigan State, both first division contenders in last season's Big Ten title chase, must be relegated to dark horse roles in the 1953 battle for cham- pionship honors. The Badgers, sparked by the booming bat of All-American Har- vey Kuenn, were third place finish- ers a year ago right beind co- champions, Michigan and Illinois. .' *.* JOHN KOBS' Spartans, despite the fact that they amassed a mea- ger overall team batting average of .231, managed to come home fifth with a record of seven wins and six losses. Although Kuenn, now wearing the spangles of the Detroit Ti- I 1 Major League Standings AMERICAN NATIONAL WV I Pet. GB W L P BIG TEN TITLE ENTRIES: Badgers, Spartans Rated Dark Horses gers, is no longer the WisconsinC shortstop, coach Art Mansfieldg has eleven other returning let-f termen around which to erect a1 strong Madison entry for thisa spring. These include Al Suter, Ron Unke, and Dave Hash, all instru- mental in last season's third place finish. Sutter and Unke, who promise to make the Wisconsin pitching staff, -one of the best in the conference, racked up identi- cal marks of six wins and two losses in 1953. * * *a HASH IS the best of three re- turning infielders. The'stocky sen- ior second baseman hit .317 in 1952, and was sixth in the Big Ten batting race with an average of] .379 against league opposition. Although the mound staff seems to be the brightest factor in the Wisconsin baseball picture, it is the major headache of Michigan; State's coach Kobs. HIS THREE major winners of a year ago, Roger Howard, Don GOLFERS Have fun at the Partridge Practice Range _- We furnish clubs and Balls - 212 miles out Washtenaw - right on U.S. 23 for 1 mile. OPEN EVERY DAY 10A.M. - 11 P.M. Quayle and Tom Lawson have graduated, making it mandatery for Kobs to develop a staff from last season's second line hurlers and a handful of newcomers. Bob Dangle has been the most effective Spartan moundsman with his most recent effort being five innings of shutout ball against Wayne last weekend. He also turned in a beautiful four hit job against tough Duke University during State's south- ern trip. One of the brightest spots in the Spartan hopes for 1953 is the new- ly formed second base combina- tion of Stan Turner and Wayne Lawrie. Turner, only a sophomore, is hitting a robust .333 and has looked very good defensively at the shortfield slot. Catcher Tom Yewcic and out- fielder Bob Dilday are being de- pended upon to lend power to the State attack. Hollywood' Screen Test for WINNER of "MR. FORMAL" Contest Bscked by a jackpot of once-in-a- lifetime-prizes, including a week's all-expense trip to Hollywood, a screen test by Alex Gottlieb Pro- ductions, a $500 U.S. Savings Bond, a complete summer formal outfit by "After Six" as well as other outstanding awards by Ronson, Kaywoodie and Charbert, the third annual intercollegiate MR. FORMAL Contest got off to a fast start on campus this week. Thus far, the following organiza- tions: Acacia; Adams House, So. Q.; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Anderson House, E. Q.; Beta Theta Pi; Del- ta Chi; Delta Sigma Phi; Delta Upsilon; Gomber House, So. Q.; Lambda Chi Alpha; Phi Kappa Sigma; Phi Kappa Tau; Phi Sig- ma Delta; Pi Lambda Phi; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Phi; Zeta Beta Tau have entered the cam- pus contest and their nomina- tions for MR. FORMAL at the University of Michigan will be announced shortly. Any campus organization of 10 or more men who have not yet re- ceivedan invitation to enter the contest, may still do so by con- tacting Robert Apple, Tele. 3-8508, and setting up an appointment to try-on the "After Six" white summer formal jackets at the following Contest stores: SAFFELL & BUSH WAGNER'S WILD'S The contestant selected as MR. FORMAL, at the University of Michigan by a panel of campus personalities, will also receive a complete .summer formal outfit by "After Six," a Ronson lighter, a formal Kaywoodie pipe, a set of Top -Hat men's toiletries plus other tie-in prizes offered by local merchants. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Pet. St. Louis..........5 New York..........5 Chicago .............3 Cleveland ...........3 Boston..............3 Philadelphia.........3 Washington .........2 DETROIT...........I 2 2 2 2 3 4 4 6 .714 - .714 - .600 1 .600 1 .500 1? .429 2 .333 2? .143 4 Brooklyn ............4 St. Louis ............3 Philadelphia .........3 Cincinnati ..........2 Chicago..............1 Milwaukee ..........2 Pittsburgh...........2 New York ...........2 2 2 2 2 3 3 4 .667 .600 .600 .500 .500 .400 .400 .333 GB 1' 1' 1 1 ',. 114' 2 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 1, Boston 0 Chicago 7, Detroit 5 Cleveland 4. St. Louis 3 Washington 5, Philadelphia 1 TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Detroit--Dobson (0-1) vs. Jordan (0-0) Boston at New York-Brown (0-0) vs. Raschi (0-1) Philadelphia at Washington (iiight) -Bishop (1-0) vs. Dixon (0-0) Only games. YESTERDAY'S - RESULTS Philadelphia 7, Brooklyn 1 Pittsburgh 5, New York 4 Cincinnati 5, St. Louis 4 TODAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at Philadelphia (night) -Loes (1-0) vs. Drews (0-0) New York at Pittsburgh (night) --Hearn (0-1) vs. LaPalme (0-0) Cincinnati at St. Louis (night)- Podbielan (0-1) or Wehmeier (0-0) vs. Mizell (0-0) Milwaukee at Chicago-Surkont (1-0) vs. Rush (1-0). Fordham University SCHOOL OF LAW NEW YORK Three-Year Day Course t Four-Year Evening Course CO-EDUCATIONAL Member Assn. of American Law Schools Matriculants must be College grad- uates and present full trans- cript of College record. Classes Begin Sept. 28, 1953 For further information address Registrar Fordham University School of Law 302 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. I I Q~%$~a#$ Ai _ four aO Poci Paddiin motorinr Aluminu family.i man ur sized. S any oft for fresh suggesti modelsi of color makes. neering -- ufactur Cl ng, lum Sta rhe i gC ยง noneI) costs less, tool - rowing - sailing - outboard - all are yours with a Grumman n Canoe. Safe fun for the whole uilt-in air tanks make your Grum- inkable and self-righting if cap. mds far more wear ahd tear than r type. No maintenance needed water.use-annual paint touch-up I for salt water use. 9 different icluding square stern-wide choice . Costs less than other popular luilt by Grumman Aircraft Engi. Corp., world's largest canoe man- Now On Display At WHO WILL BE AT UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN V TEjE 3RD ANNUAL MR. FORMAL CONTEST IS NOW UNDERWA Y! EVERY CAMPUS GROUP CAN ENTER TO WIN TE DIG LOCAL JACKPOT AND QUALIFY FOR THE NATIONAL PRIZES. AFTER SIX, America's largest maker of men's formal wear invites all fraternities, athletic teams, societies, dorms, clubs and independent groups to take part in this prize-peppered competition. Don't wait, don't hesitate, choose up your team today and contact the campus rep to arrange for time and location of tryout. NOT HING TO BUY-HERE'S ALL YOU DO! FOX SPORTING GOODS STORE 624 S. Main Street Phone 2-4407 OPEN MONDAY NITES i I S 2 I WIN THIS JACKPOT OF BIG PRIZES t'"' ii : '" : " :' > : - WHITE DINNER JACKET (with exclusiveu"Stain-Shy" finish) ?' ':: { :"c - SUMMER FORMAL TROUSERS CUMMERBUND AND TIE "FORMAL-PAK" - DRESS SHIRT _ RONSON ADONIS POCKET LIGHTER f -Press it's lit, re- lease it's out. CHARBERT "TOP HAT" SET -Plastic flasks of Eau de , olgn,,ftrshvig-oto Select a team of 10 or more men from your group to par- ticipate. Each man tries on an AFTER SIX dinner jacket and the group then chooses the member they want to represent them as Mr. Formal. A photo is taken of the winner and placed in competition with the other group winners. 4 Contact the campus representative and set-up a try-out time with him. He'll arrange a time and place convenient for your crew. 2 Winners will be chosen on the basis of what the AFTER SIX white formal jacket does for them sartorially. You can't tell who will make the best appearance until all the men in your group have taken part. 3. The campus Mr. Formal will be chosen by a panel of impartial judges and announcement of their decision will take place at a campus event and in this newspaper. Wild's Wagner Mondays and Fridays till 9 P.M. Saffell & Bush CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE OFFICIAL CAMPUS PHOTOGRAPHER Robert Apple 2006 Woshtenaw Tele. 3-8508 Matty Kassler t PL US A CHANCE TO COMPETE FOR r ll U 1s J[Q I I I 1 I I A 7