SUNDAY, MAY 16, 1954 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAr., TTM c.tz x.LLZE'z4: r. Intrasquad Game'M'Netters Wolverine Baseball Team GainSecond Splits With MSC, 8-4,9-8 Continued from3 Page I ! R o w__-__ - ping out of Cline's outstret ning. Tony Branoff, pinch-hitting glove. 7 Tr _Sea to h Dayf i,. 'ri..r n..;a,, ,-,,a. i~_ The WNlvepinesc ame clos I Buckeyes Down Golfers; MSC Loses Twice Here In the United States there are 1,312,000 broken or disrupted fam- ilies headed by men and 4,654,(100 licaded by women. Yellow orchids usually are the most fragrant. ached cPto liramer captures Morton 'trophy; Hendricks, Freshmen Stand Out By LEW HAMBURGER Neighborhood youngsters col- butions to Michigan football will lected autographs, while the hot be a fine one." sun gave some 3,000 spectators, AS FAR AS , w seemingly lost in the vast stadium, __AS FARASscorig a apeia. J to . a COLUMBUS-Michigan 's tennis team won its second match in as many days here yesterday, as the Wolverines whipped Ohio State by an overwhelming 8-1 score. Michigan lost only three sets in the entire match, and its only de- feat came in the third doubles match when Ohio's Tom Schmidt and Irv Steiner downed Bob Mit- chell and Ron Morgan, 6-1, 2-6, and 6-2. 0'r Cen~erflelder Da" C1"e, sin- the Spartan squad but never gled to center field to lead off the took the lead. After Michigan inning, and went to second on sec- State collected two additional and baseman Frank Ronan's base runs in the fifth andasixth in- hit to center. Rightfielder Paul nings, Michigan batters broke Lepley drove one of reliefer Jack into the scoring column with two runs on three safeties. Wenner's pitches to left field and ti Branoff came home with the first With two out, Tommelein sin- run of the inning. gled to right field and raced to third base as the ball scooted by Dick Idzkowski, Spartan hurl- the right fielder, Bob Powell. er who had also pitched during Shortstop Moby Benedict, next up, the first game, replaced Wenner i smacked a double to left field on the hill but had no better bringing home Tommelein with success. Third sacker Don Eaddy Michigan's first run of the after- nunched a single into right +# 31 .w 3 a chance to get their pre-summer tans as they watched Michigan's football team conclude its spring practice yesterday in the annual Blue-White game. The Blues, composed of what amounts to the first and second strings, rolled up a 48-0 score be- fore Larry Cox scampered six yards in the fourth quarter for the White's first touchdown. * * * EARLIER yesterday afternoon, it was announced at a press lunch- cerned yesterday, Tom Hendricks was the standout. The fleet tail- back scored three touchdowns on runs of 10, 13, and 60 yards. His first touchdown came in the first t f By ART EVEN In a triangular golf meet held at the University course yesterday, Michigan'was shellacked by Ohic State, 28-8, but the Wolverines managed to salvage a 21-15 win from Michigan State. The Buckeyes swamped the , Spartans, 30 -5?%z as they dis- played unusual team balance. In twelve rounds their highest score I was an 80. OHIO'S George Smith took medalist honors with an excellent 75-71-146. He was pressed by Any groups interested in playing either cricket or la- crosse inquire at the Intra- mural Building. Equipment is available. --Earl Riskey Ii 'I I x I i I i i tt 1 K Y t a with an 81-76-157 score. He gar- nered a total of seven points. The most spectacular shot of the day was made by Guarasci on the par five ninth hole during the morning round. After a fine Gtee shot the little man walked up to his ball, calmly selected a five iron from his sack and poled a long drive to the green which stopped ten feet away from the cup. Guarasci sank the putt for an eagle three. In contrast, the most miserable hole of the day was played by Har- old Ware, Spartan number two man. On the par three thirteenth, Ware's tee shot landed in a sand trap. Then he succeeded in getting the ball up to the lip of the trap. His third shot went into another trap where he blasted out into a small patch of trees. He took two more strokes to reach the green, where he two-1 putted for an eight. Andy Andrews, playing in the third slot for the Wolverines, had the dubious honor of being high man for the squad with two rocky rounds of 84. After fluffing a shot during the afternoon round on the eleventh, he grabbed his wedge I quarter as he took advantage of nice blocking, skirted his end, and turned on the speed to outrun the entire White team, A new innovation received its first trial today, as Baldacci and Duncan McDonald were playing in the backfield at the same time. While McDonald was in the game, THE ONLY other set which the' Buckeyes managed to win was at STOPPED SHORT-Blue tailback, John Greenwood, runs around right end for a small gain as White defender, Paul Baldwin S closes in for the tackle. . the expense of Morgan, who play- field, and when the throw from ed in the number six singles posi- field, andwhtheathrow fro- tion. Steiner took the first set from right field got past State catch- the Michigan netter 6-4, but Mor- from third.n gan settled down in the next toI win that by a 6-4 margin and gol Corbett, who had started the on to take the third, 6-2. game and was moved to first base Captain Al Mann set the when Ritter came to the mound in the first'half of the seventh in- -Michigan ball rolling by taking. ning, flied out to centerfield. Tom- his first singles match, 6-2, 6-3, melei's roundtripper drove in from Ohio State captain, Herb Lepley and Eaddy, giving southpa Jones. Mann's steady game Dick Peterjohn his first Big Ten proved to be too much for the Victory. Peterjohn, who starred in Buckeye to cope with, although relief Friday against the Spartans, In the latter set Jones threat- replaced Ritter in the seventh ened. frame. Pete Paulus, Michigan's second man, breezed past Tom Kemp in MICHIGAN STATE coasted to his match, by identical scores of an easy first-game victory, 8-4. In 6-2, 6-2. Bob Paley, first of four the first half of the second inning, Bobs on the Michigan squad, won the Spartans tallied twice on three his match by a 6-3, 6-2 score over hits. With one out, Yewcic singled Keith Hanlon. to left field. Centerfielder John Risch slapped a home run over the SBOB Nederlander gave u only centerfield fence, the ball drop- BOB Nderlnder ave p ol four games as he swept straight sets from Dick Botsch, 6-2, 6-2. Mitchell, in the fifth singles match, ! ajor gave up only three games, all in' the first set, as he beat Schmidt.S The doubles matches were also comparatively easy for the AMERICAN LEAGUE Michigan teams, as Paulus and W L1 Pct. (.i Paley defeated Jones and Kemp, Chicago ... 18 10 .643 - aeyNew York..16 10 .615 1 6-3, 6-3. In the second doubles Cleveland .... 16 10 .615 1 Mann and Nederlander blasted Detroit....... 12 9 .571 z' Hanlon and Botsch, 6-2, 6-2. Baltimore. 10 13 ,435 51 Philadelphia .. 10 15 .400 6? The Wolverines travel to Lafay- Washington .. 8 16 .333 8 ette, Ind. Monday for a match Boston.........s 13 .31k, 7 with Purdue, and on Wednesday return to action at the varsity A LG . G courts when Michigan State comes Philadelpia .. 15 10 .600 - to town. Brooklyn .......15 11 .57 New York .... 15 12 .556 1 St. Louis....,...14 13 .519 2 Snead Leads incinnati 15 14 . 2 i4aukee 180 3 Chicago.....10 13 .435 4 WESTBURY, N. Y.-(jT)--Sam Pittsburgh .... 9 19 .321 7 Snead made a mockery of the Meadow Brook Round Robin Golf Tournament yesterday by shoot- B OX ing a four-under-pad 66-best round of the week-to stake him- First Game self to a virtually unbreakable 34- MICHIGAN AB R H E point lead. Il i n .... .............. 0 ) 0 % Ronan, 2b ..............4 0 1 0 Now only a miracle can keep Finch (4th), 2b the 41-year-old Masters champion B. Leach (8th), 2b from clinching his third Round Lepley, rf............ 5 0 2 0 Robin title Sunday. Eaddy, 3b .............4 0 0 1 Corbett, lb............4 0 1 0 Snead's 32-34-66 over the 6,640 Tommelein, if.........4 1 1 1 yard, par 35-35-70 course piled Benedict, ss............4 1 1 0 up 19 additional points in his fav- D. Leach, c........,... ..4 0 2 1 or for a grand total of 52 plus Paechevich. lb........1 0 0 0 points. This left the third round - runnerup, Jimmy DeMaret, and 38 4 10 3 others in the field of 16 far in MICHIGAN STATE arrears. DeMaret skied to a 75 and Matthews, lb..........5 1 2 1 lost 11 points, throwing him back Matsock, ss...........5 1 1 1 Collard, 3b............6 0 0 0 into fourth place. Powell, cf............4 2 1 1 Snead's closest challengers go- Yewcic, c..............4 2 3 1 ing into the fifth and final round Brown ................4 1 2 0 gZeitier ...........4 0 1 1' were defending champion Cary Smith................4 0 1 0 Middlecoff and young Jackie Erickson, p ......2 1 1 0 Burke, Jr., each with 18 plus Idzkowski, p...........2 0 0 0 points. DeMaret followed with 13 40 8 12 5 It looked as though the Wolver- teammate Frank "Barrel" Guar-1 ines were going to catch the elus- asci who carded a 74-73-147. ive Spartans but the roof fell in Low man for the Maize andP on pitcher Marv Wisniewski when Blue was Bob McMasters. He putt 1 the scrappy Staters collected together rounds of 75 and 76 fort three hits for four runs and a a 151 score. The jovial sopho- lead that they never relinquished, more swept 5!/ out of a possibleI Ak k k six points from his Spartan op-{ 1? After Idzkowski struck out, ponent, but dropped 4111 points Matthews singled to right field to the hot-shooting Smith. They and immediately stole second broke even in the morning but base. Matsock was safe at first Sihk ' n the arnnb when Benedict threw to Eaddy round was more thanMerMas- in an attempt to tag Matthews. trouds hans All .hands were safe as Eaddy dropped the throw. Matthews Jack Stumpfig, playing in the scored on rightfielder Ray Col- number one spot, turned in a 76- lard's long fly ball to center- 78-154 card. He picked up 2 field. points from Frank Cardi and 41/ from MSC's Bill Albright. Stump- Yewcic knocked in two runs aft- fig lost a full point to Cardi on the er Powell had walked. His blow final hole when he blew a three- to left field brought home Mat- foot putt. The ball rolled delicate- sock and Powell. Risch followed ly past the lip of the cup, missing with a single and Yewcic crossed by a fraction of an inch. the plate on the play. * * * * * CHUCK BLACKETT, Michigan's BOTH GAMES were sprinkled number four man, started slowly, with errors. In the first game the then picked up steam to finish Wolverines made three miscues . -- - -_ while State bobbled five times. !Michigan State came out on top in the second contest also, commit- oL tingfour errors to Michigan's G L three. Michigan was issued a total of D D A I seven walks in the two games yes- g I C I terday afternoon. Spartan hurlers whiffed seven Michigan batters in the first contest, while Wolverine 4 miles east of Ann Arbor on moundsmen set down eight State We Furnish Clubs Free - hitters on strikes. In the second For the best puy on clubs game four Wolverines went out via the strikeout route. Only two Spar- Liberal trade-in allowan tan batters went down swinging from Wolverine pitches. and smashed caddy tossed bag. it over his knee. The the pieces into the * * ,* CATCHER Dick Leach banged out a single between short and second, Benedict scoring on the play. ISENIORS! Graduation Announcements available at IFO LLETT'S State St. at North U. I- y bj I ERS' R ich lookno This is the age of Heather Broadcloth SPORT SHIRTS The texture look in heather broadcloth, tai- lored with fine attention to detail. A perfect sum- mer sport shirt in Dan River Wrinkl-shed cotton. Resists dirt and perspira- tion odor, washes like a dream. Light and airy colors. $29s RABIDEA 1PAR RJS 119 South Main St. Ann Arbor E RANGE eon that Ron Kramer, a six-foot three-inch, 210 pound freshman end from East Detroit, won the Meyer W. Morton trophy for show- ing the most improvement during the spring practices. Kramer is regarded as a strong possibility to start at end next fall, and Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, in speaking on the selection made by the coaching staff, stated that "Kramer's improvement has been outstand- ing. If he continues to develop as steadily next fall his contri- Baldacci was shifted to fullback. The move was mainly to relieve a linebacking problem that had hurtI Michigan last fall. In the fullback slot Fred Baer and Dave Hill both stood out and it appears that the duel for that position will be a hot one when the fall practice ses- sions resume. Baer set up several touchdowns while Hill tackled hard and plunged over for one score himself. On defense, center Jim Bates' linebacking ability stood out. U.S. 23 - Near Packard Rd. Open 12 Noon till 11 P.M. s and bags - SEE US. ice on clubs and bags. . . ...... ONNOMMMMM COreS II Second Game SBlock M'Section To Initiate Sign-UpCampaign Wednesd The block 'M' section which can' be seen at all Michigan home has ever seen. Not contente football games is not a newly-con- just a pair of colored cards ceived idea. I colors, twice as many as las will add, tremendously to the In 1919 the Michigan Union of a card display. sponsored the project of coordin- * * * ating nearly a thousand students TEN NEW designs will be with cards into a sharp, disting- at every home pigskin conte uishable design that spectators a new public address system from the other side of the Ferry be installed so that instru Field Stadium could enjoy. can be given to students ope * * * the cards. AFTER A FEW years the block A group of 1200 student M section was discontinued and ticipants will sit in sec did not make another appearance ranging from the 2 to the on the campus until the '40's when rd lines. Varicolored pom interyard lines.s Varicolored po - MICHIGAN AB Cline, cf ...............2 Ronan, 2b...............3 Lepley, rf ..............4 Eaddy. 3b ..............3 Corbett, p. lb.........4 Tommelein. If.........4 Benedict, ssa...........2 Leach, c .......,.....3 Pavichevich, lb .,......2 Ritter, p..............0 Peterjohn, p...........0 27 R H E 1 1 0 3 2 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0' 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 9 1:3 3 lay d with eight t year, effect shown. st and n is tot uctions rating par- ctions e 35- poms GRADUATING SENIORS! ORDER CAPS and GOWNS Srat . . k-o 711 N. University- Harold S. Trick - South Stat. MICHIGAN STATE Sack, if...............4 1 Matsock. ss............,4 2 Matthews, lb..........3 1 Yewcic, c ..............4 1 Brown, rf.........3 1 Risch (7th)............1 1 Powell, cf...............3 0 Zeitler, 3b ..............2 (} Stead, 2b.............2 0 Gorman, p ............1 0 27 8 * singled for Godfrey in ninth - ran for Williams in ninth MICH . ...................201 010 M SC ....................000 030 1 2 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 12 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 c. i i arouse student participation. This time, also, the block idea was shortlived.M In 1951 the Wolverine Club headed a movement to reinstate the block section at Michigan's home games. Old flash cards were used by the 1600 students who sat between the 50 and 20- yard lines. The card display was on a limited scale as no flip de- signs were employed and all pat- terns consisted of but two colors. However, in its first year the Michigan card section proved more successful than those on any other Big Ten campus. The Wolverine Club has been making plans for a more elaborate 7block M' program than Michigan Iwill lend further color to the card section. A spring sign-up campaign will get under way soon for those stu- dents who would like to take part in the block 'M' section. Old mem- bers, and students who will be juniors or seniors next fall may sign up on Wednesday, May 19 at Barbour Gym. On May 20 and 21 the entire campus will have an op- portunity to sign up for the block section. Students may sign up between 12 and 3 p.m. on all three days, and those intending to do so are requested to bring I.D. cards along with 25 cents for membership. This fee will help defray the ex- pense of bringing a good block M' section to the Michigan cam- pus. INDEPENDENT SOFTBALL SCORE° Newman Club 4, Lutheran Studen Association 3 Evans Scholars 2, Michigan Co-op1 Gamma Delta 10, Michigan Christian Fellowship 9 Green Feathers 11, Kangaroos 4 Les Canadiens 1, Pill Pushers 0 Lutheran Student Association de- feated Roger Williams (forfeit) Michigan Co-op defeated The For- esters (forfeit) FRATERNITY TENNIS Phi Delta Theta 2, Lambda Chi Alpha 1 THE ITALIAN CUT specially designed to your facial features and needs 5 STYLISTS The. DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre S t MSC.................020 011 j MICH...................000 002 400-8 101-4 i" i . . . . .... ...........". ..............,.................,...,......t.......h ....u.L.."....... ,...."u r v .....u:LM.'N''..L:'.'.Y:'N:"'.«t~~ar't:aL1f:d:f~'Y..a.":*>':a ' . nI ANNUAL COLLEGE-END MEN'S ANDS O SAL WOMEN'S This Will Be A Real Sale. We Must Greatly Reduce Our &VI 30,O.OO STOCK vF FINE SHOES Before Thousands of Students, Teachers and others leave Ann Arbor for the Summer vacation, Amany new shoes just arrived included in this, our greatest sale in years. Sale starts May 17, FOR MEN FOR WOMEN 10%, 20% to 40% OFF 10%, 20% to 50% OFF New styles by Bostonian, Weyenberg, Newest styles-Over 1,500 pairs by Foot Plymouth, Mansfield, and some Flor- Rest, Lucerne, Dalmode, Golo. 1,000 sheims- pairs for Dress, Sport or Casual Wear. Cut to 3.90-4.90-6.90-8.90-10.90 >,. I IfNU fZAMP I C CA C i IAA C 05-9 05-8 11 1170 For the professional and amateur artist! You'll find all your supplies at Wahr's! SPECIAL!! E-Z Build frames, sizes 4l/2x5l/2 and 12x 16. Both for the price of $1.79. I .. .. s s El 3