THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JUNES29, 1940 Jack Emery Is Eliminated From Collegiate Golf To urney Princeton Ace Takes Measure Of Wolverine Superior Putting Clinches Match By 3 And 2 Tally; State Star Is Defeated (Continued from Page 1) during the round by dropping them in from four to ten feet away. The second round contrasted the first completely as no less than seven of the first nine holes were halved. The pair didn't split a hole on the incoming series, Emery winning three and losing four. Yesterday's firing on the Ekwanok course at Manchester, Vt., also saw Michigan State's.last survivor, Stan Kowal, put out of the running. Kow- al lost by a two and one margin to Bill Hall of Iowa State, one of last year's semi-finalists. After birdie-ing the first hole by sinking a 10 foot putt that hung on the lip of the cup before dropping, Kowal couldn't do a thing with his adversary from the corn country. Hall was four up at the turn as he fired a 37 to the Spartan's shaky 41. Kowal Shoots Eagle Coming back in amazing fashion Kowal made a spectacular stand. He. won the tenth and eleventh with an eagle three and a birdie deuce. He sunk a four-footer on the tenth and then knocked one down from 40 feet out on the eleventh. Both players won another hole with threes before Hall wound up the match by having their last three holes with two sixes and a par four. Today all the Wolverines and Spar- tans are headed for the respective homes. The collegiate golf season is over for the year. In The Majors NATIONAL LEAGUE I4e AT HLETT E R The. #&m ile to Yeu . by DAVID ZEITLIN... The Jersey Joust ... A SIDE SHOW featuring a pair of creatures declared to be physically perfect will become the main event in Jersey Tuesday night. The main event will be listed as a boxing match, but we'll always insist that if the carnival were in town it'd still be a side show . . . It'll certainly have all the selling points any leather-lunged barker of the midway could desire .. . We can hear a skinny runt with black coat, black mustache, and black cane snapping away like the tobacco auctioneer, "Step right up folks, step right up; have no fear, shed no tear. We offer you the thrill of a lifetime-legal- ized mayhem, bloody, rough and tumble conflict,' the type of thing that happens only once in a lifetime . . . You can't afford to miss it, folks. They'll slam and sock and swat and knock, and grunt and groan, and, and, well, folks, you can't afford to miss it because we ourselves don't know what will happen..." But the carnival's not in town, and this impending event still is advertised as the main show . . It'll be a one-ring circus that'll give away nothing to the three-ring show that is canvass-canopy-covered ... We'd like to see this Jersey punch party . . . It'll be one of those things every man should see . . . After it unemployment, wars, third terms, and the other problems of the moment won't count .... Even the possibility ofa fourth term wouldn't disturb the mental peace of a man who's seen the Jersey joust ... Half of the cast of this show would comprise a thing adequately terrible to be unforgettable. Antonio "He's a bum" Galento, the staveless beer barrel, was born twenty years too late for Barnum. The great showman might still be living if he had a man like Galento to show. But the rotund bartender, who quaffs more brew then he dispenses in his Jersey bistro, has those big arms that look like tree stumps. He's got legs that look like tree stumps, and his midsection is round, like a tree stump, but softer. Nevertheless this glad gladiator is tough ... His punch is unstoppable, and whatever it hits must drop . . . Tough Tony, the Jersey Jumbo, Fat Tony, the zany from across the Hudson, the beer barrel poker, the battling bar- tender, the jostling Jerseyite, the Falstaffian Galento, the Jersey round- house, (call him what you like) is this writer's idea of an irrepressible force that's that way when in company with everyone but a guy named Joe . Which is no cause for shame. The other half of the cast features a man of moods, a man named Max Baer ... .Madcap Max, as he's called, is said to be a reformed person, like a man gets after he realizes the responsibilities of fatherhood, etc., etc. Herr Max, however, although old enough to know better, is too old to do anything about it .. . Last time he fought he lost to Nova, we think, Aid the same Nova couldn't go the route with the fat man mentioned above ... In fact those tree stumps of the fat man's changed Mr. Nova's attitude on things bellicose to such an extent that he's still a pacifist in fact, al- though he's talked of a return to the wars .. . So far, just talk . . . And our reformed one, although stout of heart, doesn't have the oomph he had when he rendered Frater Carnera helpless like the poilus . . . We really don't know what Madcap Max will do when he gets in the ring with Galento ... We expect.he'll try to land one of those long, long rights . . . That won't be enough to set the barrel rolling ... Whereas the barrel will rough-house the reformed Maxie and humble him with those celebrated stumps that carry fistic TNT. . . The Jersey joust should be a pip ... It'll be unorthodox and interesting ... It'll be rough and tumble . . . We expect plenty of blood will flow, both from the fat man and from the reformed one . . . But the human keg .without staves rates as our choice to cop the prize . . . Which means that he'll fight Joe Louis in September ... The "lucky" fellow -. - For the record-Galento in ten ... German And Italian Demands In Armistice With France R.GERMANY E u. ENGLAND PARIS FRANC ITALY L -'- FRANCE ..RUMANIA .- YUGO. BULG. sLAC SEAa S SARDINIA GT GIBRALTARTU EY f R:> - SICILY 5ALGE RIA M TA 4 ; aCYPRUSQ IR A N TUNISIA MOROCCO ®- 4 :::= SUEZ CANAL FR. WEST AFRICA ANGLO- EGYPTIAN SUDANA1I- JBUTI ABABA. BR.SOM. -':ITA LEAST:!! .:---AFRICA: Ca This Associated Press map indicates demands ma de by Germany and Italy in their armistice with France. (1) Italy gains control of Jibuti in French So maliland and the Jibuti-Addis Ababa Railroad. (2) Italian armistice calls for a demilitarized zone 30 to 120 miles wide between French and Italian possessions in Africa. (3) While terms call for demilitarization of the French fleet, it was last reported in the eastern Mediterranean with the British fleet. (4) In Jerusalem there was a report that French colonies were gird- ing "for a long siege" and that the French army in Syria would become the nucleus for a new French battle force. (5) In French Morocco Gen. Auguste Nogues declared his Moroccan troops would not yield without a fight. (6) The Germans are now preparing for the "Battle of Britain." And, Germany will occupy more than half of France until a final peace. League Library Adds Six Books Volumes Obtained Cover Travel And Fiction The addition to the League Library of six new books in the fields of travel, short stories and fiction has been announced by Edna Lindsay, librarian. The collection of short stories is Marjorie Rawlings' "When The Whippoorwill," "I Married Adven- ture," by Osa Johnson, celebrated explorer, and "The Lamb Below the Wind," by Agnes Newton Keith, have been added to the group of travel books possessed by the Library. The fiction includes "The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter," by Carson McCol- lers; and S. Van Wyck Mason's "Stars On The Sea." The Library, located on the third floor of the League, is open to wo- men from 12:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. seven days a week during the Sum- meir Session. Marckwardt Treats Lakes Area Speech (continued from Page 1) concluded, that the results will be highly significant, not only in pro- viding information about the dis- tribution of regional variants of American speech, but also in making available to the historian and student of American culture new materials for research in the spread of popu- lation, and of culture in the nine- teenth century. MEET AT T~he Corner House for LUNCHEON and DINNER Daily excen Monday. Hours of serving: " 11:30-2:00 and 5:30-7:30 One block from campus 202 SOUTH THAYER Telephone 6056 * 9 W Cincinnati........38 Brooklyn........35 New York......35 Chicago..........33 Pittsburgh.. ...23 St. Louis.........22 Boston ...........19 Philadelphia ......20 L 20 20 21 30 32 33 32 37 PCT .655 .636 .625 .524 .426 .400 .373 .351 SPORTS ENTRY BLANK Intramural Sports Department All men students are eligible for competition in the following sports. Check on the list below the sports in which you wish to participate, The Intramural Sports Department will make drawings and sche- dules, furnish equipment needed for team sports, and provide officials for the contests where necessary. Notification of opponent and time of play will be mailed to each participant. No Entry Fee Required Softball ( ) Handball Doubles ( ) Swimming ( )) Golf ( ) Horseshoe Singles ( ) A ..rcm ...r.Horseshoe Doubles ( ) 300 Track Stars Seek A.A.U. Titles FRESNO, Calif., June 27. -P)- America's greatest track and field' athletes, denied a chance to gain in- ternational glory because of war- wrecked Olympic games, stage a two- day domestic version of the games tomorrow and Saturday nights in the 52nd running of the National AAU Championships. A staggering array of stars,=nearly 300 from every section of the coun- try, will compete in Fresno State College stadium. The track is ranked one of the fastest. Thursday's results: Brooklyn 5, -Chicago 4 New York 7, Phila. 0 (night game) AMERICAN Cleveland ........ Detroit .......... Boston ........... New York........ St. Louis ......... Chicago......... Philadelphia ..... Washington ...... LEAGUE W L 40 24 36 24 34 24 29 31 30 35 27 32 23 35 25 39 Pet. .625 .600 .586 .483 .462 .458 .397 .391 game) (Average Tennis Singles Tennis Doubles ( ( ( scare). Maybe you like night baseball; maybe you don't. H. G. Salsinger, esteemed sports editor of the Detroit News (no, we're not going to ask him for a job) had the following to say when the Tiger management announced its intention to install lights in Briggs Stadium-"Most un- expected announcement of the season came on Tuesday . . . A lighting system will probably be installed . . . We have not heard a single cus- tomer express a desire for night baseball . . . Detroit has always been a daylight baseball city . . . Detroit will likely continue being one ... e There has'never been a demand Squash ) Table Tennis ) Badminton ( ( ( .I ) ) ) ) RUN---------- wmmmmmmmmmw ): ., Handball Singles ( ) Codeball ( Please indicate partner's name in space below doubles entries. Yesterday's Results Detroit 2, St. Louis 1 (night Name.................Address ...................... Phone...... Mail or bring this blank to R. W. Webster, Supervisor of Intramural Sports, Intramural Sports Bldg., Ferry Field. All entries close at 5 p.m., Saturday, June 29. HANDY SERVICE DIRtECTORtY MISCELLANEOUS-20 ROOM AND BOARD-Theta Xi Fra- ternity, 1345 Washtenaw, call Alex-. ander 2-4489. Grad students pre-' ferred. 20 COLLEGE BEAUTY SHOP offers good work at low prices. Shampoo and wave, $.50; oil manicure, $.50; oil permanent, $1.95. Phone 2-2813. ARTICLES FOR SALE EVERYONE WANTS a home in the country. A beautiful 20-acre build- ing site within 4 miles of Ann Ar- bor at a cost less than a city lot. Low taxes-gorgeous view-$2,000. Terms if desired. Call evenings 6196-days 2-1847, or write owner, 4944 Scio Church Road. TYPING--1S VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist and notary public;- mimeograph- ing. 706 Oakland, phone 6327. 3 LAUNDERING-9 STUDENT /LAUNDRY-Cash and carry. Shirts 12c. Call 4863. Mrs. Richards. 18 STUDENT LAUNDRY WANTED-- Free mending. Low rates.. We pick up and deliver. Phone 3255. 17 SILVER LAUNDRY 607 Hoover Phone 5594 Free pickups and deliveries Price .List All articles washed and ironed. Shirts................... ...14 r~w, ..,.t. « _11 LAUNDERING-9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at a low price. FOR RENT FOR RENT-Large double room with sleeping porch. Ph. 7856. 15 WELL-FURNISHED ROOM, cross- ventilation, large closet, shower, only four roomers. Telephone 6152. Call afternoons. TWO-ROOM nicely furnished apart- ment for two adults. Light and constant hot water. Private rear entrance. 5435 S. Division. 19 RENT A RADIO for the summer. Very reasonable; fine sets. Also portables by the day. Stofflets, 331 So. Main, Phone 8116. GRADUATES:- A few rooms and board available at the Pi Beta Phi Sorority. 836 Tappan Road. Also board for non-residents. 10 FOR RENT-Two lovely large rooms, one with adjoining lavatory. Also suite with private bath and shower. Continuous hot water. Phone 8544, 422 E Washington. 14 for baseball after dark in Detroit . . The players certainly don't want it . . . If the citizens get a. view of it they will likely foreswear going again . . . Why the sudden switch in sentiment by the De- troit club? . . . Why the sudden re- quest for plans and specifications ... Are the policies of the Detroit club being dictated by the medicine showmen on the banks of the Mississippi? . . . One wonders." Say we, "Yes, doesn't one?" .. . Pittsburgh, which had the hard- est time getting started, is now in fifth place in the Old League --- Fiery Frankie Frisch is a great man- ager, and you can wager the Pirates will always be a tough foe with the Fordham Flash at the helm . . I Frisch won't make many mistakes - He suffered a tough break when Michigan's own John Gee injured his arm in spring training . . . The Pirates paid $75,000 American for Gee, a 20-game winner in the Inter- national League, yet he didn't pitch a game for them this year . . . He was optioned to Syracuse . . . Now we have word that the Chief's man- agement has informedPirate Pres- ident William Benswanger that it has cancelled the option . . . And Gee, since the Pirates are carrying the limit of 25 players, was neces- sarily placed on the retired list . . . Gee will be on the list for 60 days . He predicts he'll be in shape af- ter that time . . . He has our best wishes ... T ger Homers WhipBrowns Gehringer And Greenberg Blows Clinch Game ST. LOUIS, June 17. -(IP)- Big Buck Newsom, helped along with homers by Charley Gehringer and Hank Greenberg, pitched the Detroit Tigers to a 2 to 1 victory over the St. Louis Browns tonight. It was Newsom's tenth straight triumph. The victory increased the Tigers' secondhplace margin to a full game over the Boston Red Sox and left them just two games back of the idle Cleveland Indians. By chalking up a victory, Newsom became the first pitcher in the major leagues to winn10 in a row this sea- son. He has not been beaten since opening day when the Browns trimmed him at Detroit. The Tigers got only three hits but two of them were the homers by Greenberg and Gehringer and with Newsom's superb pitching it was en- ough to beat young Bob Harris, a former Detroiter. Coast Players Score Upsets U.S.C., California Stars Win In National Play HAVERFORD, Pa., June 27. -()- Two players from California scored upset victories today in the National intercollegiate tennis championships. Bill Reedy from Southern Califor- nia and Bill Canning of California reached the quarter-finals along with top ranked Don McNeill, of Kenyon, and five other seeded stars. Canning eliminated his teammate, fifth ranked Robert Peacock, in a three-set match, 3-6, 7-5, 6-4, while Reedy humbled Seymour Greenberg, of Northwestern, 6-2, 4-6, 6-3. McNeill and second seeded Joe Hunt, of Navy, advanced without dif- ficulty. McNeill beat Marion Shane, of Kalamazoo, 6-4, 6-2, while Hunt conquered William Hardie, of Miami, 6-2, 6-4. The defending champion Frank Guernsey, of Rice, had a tougher time subduing Dave Freedman, of Pomona, 8-6, 8-6. SPECIAL SALE At the State Street.Store Friday and Saturday Remaining Stocks CLASSICS A timely opportunity for B. H. Wragge enthusiasts to pick up extra pieces for their outfits, and for all those who like comfortable fit and superb tailoring in casual clothes to enjoy these masterpieces at great savings. One Group 112 Off 5 2 3 8 9 1 RAYON CREPE DRESSES ..............WERE 14.95 to BEIGE AND WHITE COATS ......... ............ WERE TwO-PIECE SUITS... . ...... WERE 22.95 and WOOL AND TWEED JACKETS. . ...... . .WERE 9.75 to WOOL AND TWEED SKIRTS.............WERE 8.50 'to PAIR SHEPHERD CHECK SLACKS . . . .... .... ...WERE 19.95 39.95 29.95 19.95 14.95 14.95 1 161 i I I, P Q;99 4 I 70 ~IUcoolIhII'~% 24 11 9 2 4 2 1 1 GOu Group1. f i+ TAILORED BLOUSES.........................WERE 6.50 TwO-PIECE DRESSES.................... ...WERE 14.95 THREE-PIECE PLAYSUITS.............WERE 14.95 to 19.95 RAYON TAFFETA JACKETS..................WERE 12.95 PAIRS LIGHTWEIGHT SLACKS. . .... WERE 10.95 AND 12.95 HERRINGTON CORD SKIRTS......... ..........WERE 9.95 HERRINGTON CORD JACKET.. . ... ... . WAS 12.95 NATURAL LINEN COAT...... ............ Was 25.00 Broken sizes 10 to 20 E 1l Inciluded in the reduictins are ai few remaining hits I1