if TUESDAY, MAY"19, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE A~S .oSEI Wolverine Netmen by Paul Greenberg EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE, to prevent bronchial infection, it's good tget some irksome matter off your chest. Our latest and biggest beef came when we opened our spanking- new 1953, camaflouge-colored Michiganensian. Being of a singular mind, our initial reaction was to turn to the sports section of this worthy publication-and it was quite a discouraging experience. A yearbook, if our orientation is correct, is designed to give you a lasting, somewhat sentimental impression of the alma mater. Despite the rather dubious need for glorification, there remains constant the'duty of such a publication to stick to the facts, and it's distressing when it doesn't. In a cursory look-through of the '53 Ensian's sport section (cov- ering somewhat over 50 pages) we came across at least two dozen factual blunders-all of which means that something went wrong somewhere. When the Ensian takes its place in the home of a Michi- gan alumnus it is supposed to give an accurate picture of the school year-true, athletics doesn't form the major part of the publication but there is still no reason for spelling a world-famous swimming coach's name incorrectly (Matt Munn instead of Mann) for giving an incorrect score of a football game (the cardinal sin I'm told) and for leaving scads of interesting pictures nameless and without descrip- tion. Dearth of Referees THE WORLD OF BOXING has been getting on our nerves lately- we're wondering just when the denizens of the pugilistic sport will decide to get hold of a couple of men that can referee a bout. The recent "fast-count" fiasco in the heavyweight championship go between Champion Rocky Marciano and ageless Jersey Joe Wal- cott brought the picture even more clearly into focus. Yet when we think of poor ring officiating we can't help but remember a rout in which Walcott came out on the long end. In this match mustachioed Ezzard Charles was trying to pull that yet-to-be-accomplished feat of recovering a lost heavyweight title. The official in question was Zack Clayton, part-time member of the Harlem Globetrotters basketball circus, and what he pulled on Charles that night was no laughing matter. Clayton would gently hold Pappy Joe and viciously shove Charles when breaking the clinches-he was constantly repri- manding the younger boxer for low blows, while though Wal- cott's gloves several times slipped under the "Everlast" label on Charles' shorts, he never heard a word from Clayton. When the bout was over and Walcott still had his aging haunches on the heavyweight throne, Clayton almost smiled with the satisfaction of accomplishment. If poor refing can invade the championship ranks (witness the Carter-Collins lightweight title go when the Boston Irishman spent more time on the horizontal than vertical) we can't but wonder what kind of garbage is officiating the smaller bouts. This kind of poor management slams a blow right into the solar plexus of the ring sport-which has lately professed an attempt to "clean house." It's pretty discouraging to boxings fandom when it has this stuff foisted on it. Nederlander, Paulus Sole 'M'Winners (Continued from Page 1) ground for the second set and came back with a 6-4 win. He con- tinued with a strong game in the final set and had little trouble in chalking up a 6-3 edge to cop the match. The only Maize and Blue net- ter to win singles matches in both meets with State, Bob Ned- erlander continued his domi- nance over Spartan Howard Trier. Nederlander gained the victory in two sets, taking both by 6-4, 6-4 counts. * * * A NUMBER one doubles combi- nation of Stan Drobac and Belton outclassed Michigan's first lin- ers Paulus and Bob Paley. The tor- rid two smashed their way to a 6-4, 6-1 triumph, an improvement over last week when the same match carried to three sets before State gained the decision. John Sahratian and Dick Rob- erts, another top flight Spartan combo, beat Al Mann and Bob Curhan, 6-1, 6-3, identical with their margins for the previous meet. Probably the top singles player in the Conference, Stan Drobac ran over Mann in two easy sets, 6-0, 6-2, exuding brilliance in all points of play. Dave Mills bowed again to his ex-teammates. Competing against Sahratian he dropped a close first set, 6-4, put on a spirited rally for a 6-4 win in the second set, and then was edged in the final set, 6-4. Number four and five men Maury Pelto and Paley both were beaten by Spartan competitors. Pelto fell victim to Roberts; 6-3, 6-3, while Paley, facing Jim Pore, held out for a third set, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2. MichiganBaseball'Hopes Dimmed by WeathermanI By DAVE BAAD Michigan's Big Ten baseball ti- tle hopes received a rude jolt this past weekend, as the weatherman washed the Wolverines out of two direly needed prospective victories.f Coach Ray Fisher's charges de- feated Purdue, 2-1, on Friday to' gain their seventh conference de- cision against three setbacks, butf Saturday's important doublehead- er with the winless Indiana Hoos- iers was postponed, leaving thet Maize and Blue still a full game be- hind league leading Illinois.t * * * THE ILLINI, tied for secondf place with Ohio State a week ago, forged into the top spot with a single game triumph over the. Buckeyes. Iowa, although winning4 two out of three this weekend, n dropped a half game off the pace into the second slot. MARV WISNIEWSKI Three conference games re- . .. will return to action 1 main for each team. To secure at * 1 least a tie for the league leader- lected only thirteen hits in the ship, Michigan must beat Wis- pair of games. Only two regulars consin next Friday and then still remain over the .300 figure. sweep a doubleheader from Bruce Haynam, whose only hit eighth place Northwestern on drove across the winning run in Saturday. Meanwhile, Illinois the 3-2 victory over Notre Dame, and Iowa must lost at least one slumped from a .323 mark to a game. slightly less lusty .304. Bill Billings, It is very conceivable that this playing against only left handed could happen. Illinois faces fifth hurling collected one for four off place Minnesota in a twin-bill the slants of Purdue's Ray Rosen- Saturday and likely will meet Go- baum to maintain a .346 average.1 pher pitching ace. Paul Giel, in one One cheering note in the base-l of the contests. The Hawkeyes ball picture is the possibilitya meet Ohio State which is present- that Marv Wisniewski, ace ly in a third place tie with Michi- southpaw of last year's cham- gan. pionship aggregation, will be * * ready to hurl one of next week- IF BOTH Illinois and Iowa end's games. come through these dobuleheaders Wisniewski. who won four con- unscathed then the Wolverines are ference decisions a year ago, has out of the race. since the two been virtually useless due to a sore; pace setting clubs meet each oth- arm since he beat Illinois on an er in the season concluding fray eight hitter during the first week next Moniav. I this spring. Lose Schleh Hurls Hinsdale Win OverWenley Gomberg Slaughters Kelsey Nine, 14-0 Hinsdale House, behind the su- perlative picthing of Larry Schleh, trounced Wenley 7-0 yesterday in a first-place play-off Residence Hall game. Schleh gave up only three hits while fanning eight as Hinsdale took a 1-0 lead in the first inning and was never seriously threaten- ed. .4 * * IN THE OTHER first place play- off contest Gomberg had an easy time defeating Kelsey 14-0 in a game marked by many walks. The winners sent 16 men to bat in the first inning, 11 of them receiving free passes, to score 12 runs. Jack LaBreck was the winning pitcher. Chicago House was another team that had a big first inning. They sent 10 men to bat in the initial frame to score five times and go on to defeat Cooley 7- in a second place play-off game. The big blow in this rally was a three run homer by Bob Milli- gan. Bill Sommers hurled for the winners. Michigan defeated Winchell 4-3 in the other second place game, by scoring three runs in the fifth inning and one in the sixth. OTHER SCORES SOFTBALL Allen-Rumsey 13, Williams 8 Greene 4, Reeves 3 Taylor 10, Scott 7 Adams 10, Van Tyne 5 HORSESHOES Delta Sigma Delta 3, Psi Omega 0 TENNIS Taylor 2, Williams 1 Phi Delta Phi 3, Phi Delta Chi 0 Business Administration defeated Newman (forefit) 'M' Golfers Face Titans In Dual Meet at Detroit to, MSC, 7-2 By JIM DYGERT After a short two-day rest, the Wolverine linksters return to ac- tion today in a dual meet against the University of Detroit Titans. Besides Saturday's defeat by the Buckeyes and the two losses suf- fered on the southern training trip, tle only blemish on Michi- gan's 1953 golf record is the 131/2- 13%/ tie with the Titans on the University course last month. ALTHOUGH NOT a highly-re- garded squad, Detroit combined some steady playing with erratic Wolverine golf and gained the tie on the 18th hole when Sophomore Ray Maisevich sunk a 15-foot clutch putt for a birdie three. In other competition with Big Ten linksmen this season, the Titans have encountered only! Michigan State, upsetting the improved Spartan outfit in their first meeting, 14x-121/, and dropping the second battle, 19-8. A veteran of three years in the golf wars, 27-year-old Mike An- donian captains the Titan squad. Andonian fired the lowest round, 77, for Detroit in the - match against Michigan. * * . * 1 JUNIOR BILL Huetteman, win- ner of last year's Fisher Golf Tour- nament, plays the number two spot for the Titans. In the win over Michigan State, Huetteman tied Spartan Biff Hills for medalist1 honors with a 74. Another'Titan swinger is Roa Stelter, who surprised Detroit Coach William Jroyce in this year's Fisher Tournament by dumping last year's captain, Tony Novitsky, by four strokes. Joyce's sextet is rounded off by three other sophomores, Maisevich, Ray Conlon, and Don Fraser. Con- lon played for Detroit last year as a freshman. The Wolverines leave for De- troit today with the same sextet that played in Saturday's quad- rangular meet, Captain Hugh Wright, Lowell LeClair, Jack Stumpfig, Bud Stevens, Tad Stanford, and Warren Gast. LeClair faltered somewhat in the quadrangular affair, his 78-79- 157 being ten strokes higher than his medalist effort the Week before at East Lansing. Stevens and Stumpfig were also off formSaturday. Stevens turn- ed in a 152 and Stumpfig a 155, both scores far removed from their 143's when they tied for lowest in Michigan's triangular meet with Northwestern and Iowa. The Detroit match offers to the Wolverines the last competitive warm-up before the Big Ten cham- pionship meet at Madison, Wis- consin, on May 29 and 30. After the match, Coach Bert Katzen- meyer's charges will settle down to some serious practice in prep- aration for their Big Ten title de- fense. For... designed hair styling and a designed shoe shine in cool, modern surroundings - try - U. of M. Barbers 715 N. University I I Uncooperative Weatherman OUR LAST COMPLAINT for today deals with the obvious and tragic mismanagement of the Indiana Weather Bureau. The Hoosier rainmaker may well have dealt a fatal blow to the Michigan baseball team's aspirations in the Western Conference pennant chase. Ready with two top-flight pitchers to go against the victory- less Indiana aggregation, Coach Ray Fisher's crew saw its twinbill rained out and Michigan had to settle for a single 3-2 conference triumph over Purdue on what seemed to be a promising three- victory weekend. There still is a mathematical possibility that the Fishermen can snare the league laurels, and the return to form of southpaw hurler' Marv Wisniewski, who's been laid up with arm troubles, may heli. But if Michigan comes through on top, it won't be with the coopera- tion of that Bloomington weatherman who, in conjunction with old Jupiter Pluvius, dampened the Wolverines chances for a double win against the "roll over and play dead" Hoosier diamond squad. lajor Leagule Standings 1.lCSt, ~ l~ttleiy. An outstanding pitching per- formance by Jack Corbett was the influential factor in the Wolver- ines' Friday triumph over Purdue. The strong armed rightheander racked up his third Western Con- forence victory of the season as he turned back the Boilermakers on seven hits. The Wolverine offense, weak in both-the Purdue tussle and in the nonrconference battle with Notre Dame last Thursday, col- AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Chicago Cleveland Boston Washington St. Louis Philadelphia Detroit UL~i7 U~l t1£. .1 NV 18 19 15 15 15 12 12 9 L 9 12 11 12 1'r 16 18 9,, .667 .613 .556 .500 .4329 .400 .276 G.B 1 ? t 4?4 sr, 2 . 1t I10G 'FEN BASEBALL Illinois Iowa Ohio State Michigan Wiscon sin ! Michigan State Northwestern Indian Purdue STANIING S 8 2 .ba00 7 2 .788 7 3 .700 7 3 .700 6 3 .667 5 3 .625 4 6 .400 6 .250 o 9 .000 0 9 .00 ;. . i .. ;1, .w: . fi,; : fi. { >", > ' ' . +. ; .. .Y' f. . r r y - . { .fi .{: ; NIIwU. .iii: .Q. ' J: i' :}' ': 3, , 1111 irmiWeather 'Means Lighter Weight Suits Save your heavy-weight suits, be comfortable in lower priced light- weight TROPICAL SUIT We recommend a Tropical Mohara wool worsted as the most practical suit for summer wear * . Retail $45.00. The Nylcord Suit by McGregor $32.50 The Palm Beach Suit $25.95 to $35.95 We are headquarters for Manhat- tan, Van Heusen and Stradivari dress and sport shirts. Regular and half sleeves. Strictly University COTTON CORDS IN THE IVY LEAGUE 3-BUTTON MODEL Coinpletely washable . Guaranteed never to shrink, lade, or discolor. Colors: Blue, Brown, Grey. SUIT.... $22.50 JACKET... $16.00 CUSTOM TAILORS FURNISHINGS Phone 9520 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 5, Boston 2 (1st Game) Boston 8, Detroit 5 (2nd Game) Washington 3, Chicago 0 TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Washington, night Chicago at Philadelphia, night Detroit at New York, night St. Louis at Boston AMERICAN W t EARN $237.00 in ELEVEN DAYS . before starting your summer vacation or that summer job. Board and room optional at $3 per day. If you stay the full period board and room is free. Only men in good physical condition are wanted as you work 12 hours each day for about eleven straight days. STARTING TIME June 14th. PLACE . . . . . Maumee, Ohio. 10 miles south of Toledo. KIND OF WORK Concrete grain elevator silo pour. RECREATION . . T.U. Coach Dunn in charge-basket- ball, volley ball, swimming, archery, horseshoe, motion pictures. 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