THE MICHIGAN DAILY !AG _.__ ,. ,_ . __ zAG ThRE _ nelson Defeat's Fry To Advance In Tournament Byrd, Wood Beaten as McSpaden Is Victor SPOKANE. Wash., Aug. 17.-(.P)- While the two tournament hotshots breezed through to easy victories, two other name players were tumbled out of competition today to provide the upsets of second round matches of the 1944 National P.G.A. golf cham- pionship. Byron Nelson, Toledo, O., and Har- old McSpaden, Philadelphia, raced through their 36-hole matches, the former walloping Mark Fry, Oak- land, 7 and 6, and McSpaden taking the measure of Fred Annon, Mam- aroneck, N.Y., 8 and 7. Their wins were expected, there- fore it was just so much routine, but the dunping of duration U.S. Open champion Craig Wood of Mamaron-- eck and Sam Byrd, of Detroit, Mich., furnished the thrills for a gallery that numbered more than three thousand fans. Art Bell, lanky San Francisco power hitter, ousted Wood by a 3 and 2 count. It was no more surprising than the 2 and 1 win posted for. Charles Congdon, Tacoma, Wash., over Byrd, the ex-New York Yankee outfielder. Byrd and Wood, inciden- tally, are the third and fourth high- est money winners for the year;' trail- ing McSpadennand Nelson. Nelson fired his fourth consecutive 69, against the par .72 Manito course in his morning round with Fry, yet held only a 1-up lead because of his rival's 71. The Oaklander had a blow-up, which included a streak of hooked drives, on the third nine when Nelson built upt a five-hole margin,. Mc- Spaden ran away from Annon with a 4-up lead at the 9th; 5-up 18th with 70 shots and 7 up at the 27th. I.., . .r: .. . .. 1. tNak the /''u40 By HANK MANTHO Daily Sports Editor Will a New P.G.A. Golf Champ Be Crowned? W l DOWN THROUGH the years, there have been various debates by coaches, players, and others as to which sport does more for building the body of an athlete. Since the beginning of the war, this question' has changed slightly and is now viewed with the idea of which sport is the best condi- tioner for military service. Many authorities claim that the body contact presented in football makes that sport the best preparation for service men. However, W. H. (Billy) Thom, veteran Indiana University and former Olympic match coach, differs in his opinion, and states that wrestling will do more for condition- ing and preparation for actual combat than will any other sport. "The wrestler is on his own and so is the soldier or Marine in the hand to hand fighting we have seen in the Pacific and in Italy and as we shall see in future invasions," stated Coach Thom, who in six- teen years at Indiana University has produced 26 Western Conference and'12 National intercollegiate individual wrestling champions. [AVING participated in both sports and taking full use of my preroga- tive, this scribe would also cast his lot with Coach Thom, and in this respect, go against the critics. Once a boy goes in for wrestling, he is given a chance for self-expression, and when he enters a wrestling match the final outcome is his sole respon- sibility. He makes his decisions as an individual, and his whole battle is fought on his own intelligence and initiative. Taking into cognizance all reports which have emanated from the various battlefronts, these same elements have meant either life or death for our fighting men when they came into contact with the enemy. A lot of people have had the idea that wrestlers are thugs and very crude. Where this expression and! description of a wrestler originated, I can easily guess, but it is not the professional ranks of this sport that I uphold. If these very same people formulate opinions of intercollegi- ate wrestling with this prejudice in mind, then they should be consis- tent and judge all other sports the same way; for the "grunt and groan" man is- the same as any other college student on any specific athletic team. JN RECENT years, there has been an increased interest in wrestling, not only from the point of view of the spectators, but also many of the students in the different P. E. M. classes have asked to go out for the team. But the recent actions of Athletic Director H. O. "Fritz" Crisler, who, in a sudden move to reduce the athletic budget, dismissed Ray Courtright, wrestling mentor, brought many speculations that wrestling would be dropped, as was hockey. However, Coach Crisler has promised that as long as any other Big Ten school has wrestling, Michigan will have a team to compete. And it is my fervent belief and hope that in these times when individual initia- tive and self-expression is needed more than ever, that a sport which does more to promote these ele- ments than any other, is not ban- ned from the athletic program. By WHITNEY MARTIN this year is a little on the synthetic Associated Press Correspondent i1order originated with Duke Ridgley, NEW YORK, Aug. 17.-They will who writes a sprightly column in the crown a new P.G.A. champion at Huntington, W.Va., Herald-Dispatch. Spokane Sunday. Or will they? Duke has more than a gabbing inter- They will if they can conveniently est in the status of the winner of the forget the P.G.A. already has a current tournament, as he was the champion, prevented by duty in the first "we want Sam Snead" man, and armed service, or at least by an in- Sam Snead, now in the Navy, won jury connected with that duty, from the last P.G.A. tournament played.' defending his title. And winning a Duke has much logic to back his title without defeating a defending argument that the winner of the champion always leaves the crown durrent tournament will be a stand- with a rather tinny sound. in champion at best, although prob- The idea that the championship ably the world's highest paid stand- in. He stands to make a few thous- and out of the tourney proper, and maybe some thousands more through the by-products of his victory, al- though the by-product business isn't quite as brisk as it was in the lush days before the war. Anyway, Duke says that, because Joe Louis is in the service and unable to do anything about it, doesn't mean a couple of stumble bums could stage a fight with the winner crowning himself champion. Not that the field in the .Spokane tournament is made up of golf stum- ble bums. With maybe three or four notable exceptions, it probably is as good a field as the meet ever had. But the fact remains, the defending champion isn't there to protect his crown. If he was absent through choice that would be different, but Snead has no choice in the matter. Snead won the 1942 tournament at Atlantic City. This was his first vic- tory in a national tournament, al- though he is rated by many as the best played living. He came within a whisper of winnhig the National Open at Philadelphia in 1939. SWEATERS are TOPS in back-to-school wardrobes eind GOODYEAR'S Sporty Shop has them! ....---- \ o of s i y ayr D . $k APPaIl t'T ' . IZ OD O F L ON D ON It will never outgrow its beauty and usefulness - the easy, classic shirt - the slim pared-down skirt. You'll wear it wherever-whenever throughout the day. Izod tailors it in pure wool and soft angora and adds a trite' pigskin belt. Brown, green, thistle; gold and blue. Sizes 10-16. S15 Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE 5 { 4'v w 2 ~ ::c.~- t }~~~~ _Y , .... 47 ; ~4 a . I / Here are sweaters to satisfy all your special yearnings for luscious-looking colors, for fit that's smooth. or boxy. In weights to wear with skirts, un- TEAMS W *St. Louis ......80 Pittsburgh ......63 Cincinnati ......61 Chicago ........49 *New York ......50 Boston .........44 Philadelphia ... .42 Brooklyn .......44 L 28 45 46 56 61 66 64 67 Pct.. .741 .583 .570 .467 .450 .400 .396 .396 GB 171/ 18%/ 291/ 362 37 371/ *Denotes night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 7-6 Philadelphia 6-5. Boston 7, Chicago 5. Brooklyn at Cincinnati, wet grounds. New York at St. Louis, night. AMERICAN LEAGUE nylon shortie, 5.00 Zephyr-light pullover, soft as silk in this treasured yarn. Short of sleeve, smooth-fitting at the waist ... perfect suit companion. White, yellow, powder, cherry, pink. Sizes 34 to 40. "ynubby knis" pullover, 7.95 cardigan, 10.00 Newest of the classics but al- ready one of the biggest favor- ites! Knit in a nubby yarn that's all pure wool and imported from Scotland. Powder, pink, purple, yellow, green, white. Sizes 34 to 40. f uzz y-wuzy" pullover, 5.00 Nice 'n long, 'n boxy. In a fleecy- soft shetland-type yarn that al- most purrs like a kitten! Lilac, yellow, vanilla, white. Sizes 34 to 40. campus classics pullover, 3.95 cardigan, 5.00 der jackets, over shirts .. . just come see! SPORT SHOP SPORTS SHOP-THIRD FLOOR Also at the State St. Store TEAM W St. Louis........68 Boston..........60 DETROIT ......59 New York .......59 * Chicago .......53 Cleveland.......54 Philadelphia ....52 *Washington .... 47 L 46 52 52 52 59' 62 64 65 Pet. .596 .536 .532 .532 .473 .466 .448 .420 GB 7 7 7 14 15 17 20, ~' ~ ~.' 4 *.. \ I *Denotes night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS DETROIT 3, Boston 3 (called end of five innings, rain). St. Louis 10, Philadelphia 5. New York 10, Cleveland 3. Chicago at Washington, night. Yanks Top Indians; Lindell Ties Record NEW YORK, Aug. 17.-(.T)- The New York Yankees gained , their fourth straight victory today, bump- ing five Cleveland pitchers for 17 hits and an easy 10-3 victory over the Indians. Johnny Lindell was the Yankee bellweather, lacing out five hits, in- cluding four doubles, which tied a major league record. The last player to hit four doubles in a game was Billy Werber, with the Cincinnati Reds in 1940. Lindell also drove in two runs to increase his total to 66. Cleveland .. .100 101 000- 3 10 0 New York .. .212 101 12x-10 17 1 CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY_ WANTED R.N. OFFICER'S WIFE needs living quarters for herself and young daughter. Studio apt. or share homework and expenses. Write Marion Wade 246 Pingrie, Rt. 3, Kalamazoo 83, Mich., or phone Dean of Women, University. LOST AND FOUND ',: ~ . * .g ' r, f. "Must-haves" to pair up for s' cold-weather or to wear separ- ately. Fine hand-look knit in 100% wool shetland-type yarn. Cherry, purple, pink, yellow. Sizes 34 to 40. sleeveless pullover, 4.50 The sweater that gives you Fall's favorite "jumper look." Slick over shirts, just right for an extra bit of warmth 'neath a jacket. 100% wool . green, cherry, maize, pink. I~ / fi skirts, too! 6.50 to 10.95 Lots of them to choose from here . . . to blend with sweaters, pair with jackets. Monotone and plaid tweeds, herringbone weaves, menswear flan- nel. A rainbow array of autumn colorings. Straight- cut, pleated, gored and demi-dirndl styles. ,rrr l7L U .._. a I I