f FLAY, AUGUST 1, 1947 F THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGEs .. PAGR T Katzenmeyer Gives Lesson To cOptimists' Louis Meets 'Jersey' Walcott In November 'Non-Title' Fight Baseball's Big Six Brooks Trip Cards, 2-1; Tigers-Y anks Rained Out I-M SPOUTFOLIO Hole-in-One Features 'M' Bert Katzenmeyer, Michigan's Western Preview Coach coach of Conference; golf champions, demonstrated some championship form of his own yesterday morning on the Municipal Course for the benefit of those hunting a few pointers to use in the hole-in-one tourney the Ann Arbor Optimist Club is staging Aug. 4 . The youthful links boss took a total of 28 shots on the 150- yard 16th hole, and managed to land 16 of them on the green. Furthermore, eight of the others were pin-high and just a shade off. Seven Feet Shy The nearest thing to the sought- after ace came when the ball eased to a stop 7 ft. 3 in. from the cup, a rather acceptable drive in any expert's game. The Katzenmeyer exhibition was a sneak-preview of what will happen come Aug. 4 when en- trants in the Optimists' tourney line up their respective irons on the same 16th. 40 Prizes Offered About $400-worth in prizes is being offered by local merchants, 25of them going to men, 10 to women. Chairman Arthur Renzy also has on hand five surprise packages to present, for anything from the day's most sensational dub to the day's first tee-off. k SFETYTf FIRST It's better to HAVE good brakes than to WISH you had. All Service Guaranteed KNOLL & ERWIN, Inc. HUDSON GARAGE 907 North Main Phone 7040 or 4066 NEW YORK, July 31-(P)-Jer- sey Joe Walcott of Camden, N.J., will climb into the Madison Square Garden Ring Nov. 14 to7 face Joe Louis without having, in theory at least, a chance of lift- ing the Heavyweight Champion's title. The match, announced today by Sol Strauss, acting director of the 20th Century Sporting Club, is billed as a 10-round non-title figh$, and inasmuch as a bout must be booked for 15 rounds to be considered as a championship fight in New York, Walcott would seem to be fighting only for prestige he might attain. That, and what is known as money. The National Boxing Associa- tion also recognizes only 15-round bouts for the championship, ex- cept in possible member states where 15-round bouts are not per- mitted. Prexy Abe Greene said that should Walcott win by a kayo no commission could deny his title claim. The fact that Louis would, in the public mind at least, be con- sidered an ex-champion were he to be knocked. out makes it theoretically his 24th title de- fense. The bout is the first of two 10- round so-called non-title affairs planned for Louis the coming win- ter. The other, against an op- ponent yet to be chosen, is sched- uled for next March. Walcott, a 32-year-old veteran of the ring wars, is considered by many as the best of the current crop of so-called contenders. He has had three fights this year, defeating Joey Maxim twice and outpointing Elmer "Violent" Ray. He had lost close decisions to each of these men previously. He is a wide- shouldered, well-muscled indi- vidual with a fair punch and much cleverness and know-how. His left jab is rated among the best in the business. Louis last appeared in a bout other than an exhibition when he knocked out Tami Mauriello in 7 the first round at Yankee Stadium Sept. 18, 1946. The dearth of ac- ceptable opponents has kept him idle since. Louis, Strauss said, will start preliminary training early in Sep-, tember at West Baden, Ind. Hetzeck Loses IJunior Net Quarter-Finals KALAMAZOO, Mich., July 31- (/P)--lerbert (Buddy) Behrens, topseeded junior from Fort Laud- erdale, Fla., was only two matches away from . the National Junior Tennis crown today after he went into the semi-finals by defeating Macdonald Mathey, Princeton, N.J., 6-1, 6-3, in the National Jun- ior and Boys' Tennis Champion- ships here. Behrens, who has tried for two years to take the junior title away from Herbie Flam, West Coast star who has vacated the championship, meets George Gen- try, La Jolla, Calif., in a semi- final match tomorrow Gentry, seeded No. 8, earned his semi-final -berth by upsetting the Western Junior titleholder, Tony Trabert, Cincinnati, Ohio, 6-4, 6-3 today. Trabert was seeded fourth. The No. 2 junior, Richard Moul- edous, New Orleans, was matched against unseeded and unpredict- able Jerry De Witts of Vallejo, Calif., who had eliminated three seeded players in his climb to the semi-finals. De Witts today disposed of Alex Hetzeck, Hamtramck, Mich., num- ber three seeded junior, 6-1, 5-7, 6-1. Previously De Witts had beat- en Gilbert Bogley, Chevy Chase, Md., seeded fifth, and Canada's champion Lorne Main, Vancouver, B.C. (Three leaders in each league) G AB Pct. Walker, Phillies 93 339 .354 Boudreau, Indians 85 304 .339 DiMaggio, Yankees 94 357 .333 Gustine, P*Eates 97 375 .331 Kell, Tigers 92 351 .331 Cooper, Giants 80 309 .324 RUNS BATTED IN NATIONAL LEAGUE Mize, Giants 83 Marshall, Giants 80 Cooper, Giants 77 AMERICAN LEAGUE Williams, Red Sox 71 j DiMaggio, Yankees 69 Henrich, Yankees 64 Doerr, Red Sox 64 HOME RUNS lkATIONAL LEAGUE Mize, Giants 31 Marshall, Giants 27 Kiner, Pirates 25 AMERICAN LEAGUE Williams, Red Sox 23 Heath, Browns 20 Gordon, Indians 18 Furgol Leads St. PaulGolf ST. PAUL, MINN., July 31-(;P) -A 12-foot putt that dropped on the 18th hole for a birdie four, swept Ed Furgol, Pontiac, Mich., professional into a first-day lead in the St. Paul $10,000 Open Golf Tournament today, with a 67, five strokes under par for the Keller Municipal Course. Furgol's card was one stroke better than those of four other contestants who had visions of sharing the lead. Wh the N becau ager] don s yester ed a ton,d Th the C 11-hi the w Mis Louis M Reese, Lombardi Star as Dodgers Sweep; Cleveland Home Runs Defeat Red Sox, 54 file the Detroit Tigers and beat the Brownies, 4-1, last night. vew York Yankees were idle It was Heafner's third straight se of rain, homers by Man- win. Lou Boudreau and Joe Gor- Brooklyn Wins cored all of Cleveland's runs Over in the National League, day as the Indians complet- Brooklyn waltzed out of St. Louis three-game sweep over Bos- with a 13-game winning streak, a lowning the Red Sox, 54. 10-game lead and a clean sweep Philadelphia Athletics beat of its important series with the hicago White Sox, 3-2, on an defending champion Cardinals off t attack. Bill Dietrich was a 2-1 victory in the finale. inning pitcher. limited St. Pee Wee Reese, whose tenth- to five hits as Washington inning single had nullified the Cards' dramatic uphill surge Wednesday night, came through T, - with a ninth-inning triple yester- ajor League day to score Bruce Edwards who had singled. Standin gS The triumph, spun by little Vic Lombardi, who only recently was restored to grace as a starting AMERICAN LEAGUE pitcher, gave the Brooks their W L Pet. GB second longest win string in his- York 61 32 .670 .... tory. Their record of 15 was set in on 52 43 .547 12 1924. oit 49 43 .533 13'V2 Howie Pollet gave up ten hits adelphia 49 48 .505 16 for the Cards and suffered his eland 43 45 .489 171/2 ninth defeat. It was his first loss hington 42 50 .457 20%/, to Brooklyn this season. ago 42 56 .429 232 Giants Lose Louis 34 59 .366 29 Grady Hatton's three-run hom- * er in the eighth enabled the Cin- NATIONAL LEAGUE cinnati Reds to down the New W L Pet. GB York Giants, 8-7, while Johnny klyn 63 36 .636 .... Mize smacked his-31st homer of York 49 42 .538 10 the year and Walker Cooper his Louis 51 44 .537 10 24th. on 50 45 .526 11 "Dutch" Leonard held the Chi- innati 47 52 .475 16 cago Cubs to five scattered hits as ;argo 44 52 .458 17 21 Philadelphia won thir third vic- sburgh 40 56 .417 211/ tory in 16 meetings with the Cubs adelphia 40 57 .412 22 this year, 3-0. Boston and Pittsburgh were rained out. With the color and excitement of the mid-season All-Star game behind them, thirty-three teams in t h r e e Intramural softball leagues can now turn their at- tention to the remainder of the schedule and concentrate on the stretch drive leading to the championship tournament. According to tourney director Chuck Dailey, eight teams will meet in the elimination event which begins on Wednesday, August 6. The Fraternity and Independent Leagues will be represented by three squads each, while the residence halls will send two teams to the post. Four of the competing outfits have already clinched tourney berths. The Law Club and Hav- enites are certain starters from the Independent loop, while the Fraternity League is sure to be represented by Zeta Beta Tau and Psi Upsilon. The complete schedule: Law Club vs. Independent team (not selected) ZBT vs. Residence Hall (not selected) Psi U vs. Residence Hall (not selected) Havenites vs. Fraternity (not selected) * * * ALL STAR GAME SIDELIGHTS While the Independent League won the intramural All-Star game Tuesday, the umpires took the worst beating of all. The Boys in Yellow (T-shirts) were good- naturedly raked over the coals by the fans on every close decision, and the ump behind the place must have drawn short straw to land that job. * * * The game had all the trap- pings of a big league contest-- four umpires, programs, flags marking out the foul lines, and an official scorer. Indeed, only one thing was lacking--neither President Ruthven nor Gover- nor Dewey was there to throw jout the first ball. There was no Press Box at the game, and the Daily reporter had to stand behind the batter's cage to watch the curves-although there were many, many along the sidelines-seats, that is. SOFTBALL RESULTS INDEPENDENT LEAGUE New Bost Detr Phil Clev Was Chic St. 4 West Lodgers 13, Foulballers (Play-off ) FRATERNITY LEAGUE Sigma Nu 11, Sigma Chi 6 (playoff) RESIDENCE HALL LEAGUE Williams 8, Wenley 7 Allen-Rumsey 13, Winchell 4 Lloyd 5, Chicago 4 Adams 7, Fletcher 2 ART CINEMA LEAGUE Presents Broo New St. Bost Cind Chic Pitts Phil -.-.' " e!! | r-I t ia. Modern G l 1 + Classified Advertising + -- Through Saturday - LIFE A PUBLIC Read and Use The Daily Classifieds ~ L ABSENTEEISM: Truman announces Controls As .duck Production. Declines 'IT'S CREW-CUT TIME' Be you flat, round, or square headed - we'll design one to fit your Personality. 8 bar- bers - No waiting. Fan- cooled! Tonsorial queries in- vited! The Daseola Barbers Between State and Michigan Theatres Prices 25c until 5 p.m. 30c after 5 p.m. -- Friday and Saturday - BRIAN DONLEVY in "THE BEGINNING OF THE END" Also -- JUDY CANOVA in "SINGING IN THE CORN" WASHINGTON, July 31-(P- The government today sharply restricted the open season and bag limits on duck hunting, decreeing an average of 30 days shooting in the east and 35 in the central and western states. The curtailment reflects a marked decline in the waterfowl population and poor breeding conditions along the mi- gratory routes. Last year the country's average open season was 45 days. It was 80 in 1945. Limit Set This year's daily bag limit on ducks was set at four, as compared with seven last year and 10 in THE L. G. IJALFOUR> STORE "Your Official Jewelers" Open every day - Monday through Friday 1:30 until 5:00 Home of the Official ? University of Michigan ring IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1319 S. University Ph. 9533 y? ::.;, :;.,_.;" {:;'.i................:-{ '-?$ ::;:? Tt;;-x:; ii't 1945. The limit on the number of ducks a hunter may have in his possession was set at eight, com- pared with 14 last year and 20 the year before. Shooting hours generally fall within the period of sunrise to sunset with some specific excep- tions for certain types of fowl. Opening dates vary according to states. The fish and wildlife service said that the states, which have the option of splitting their season, have already decided this matter individually. Today's regulations, issued by President Truman, are remini- scent of the big duck depression of the mid-30's. They also cover various other wildfowl. Population Drops A January estimate put the wa- terfowl population at 54,000,000, a decline of 26,000,000'from the 1946 estimate. The 1943 estimate was 126,000,- 000. This has been reduced, in part because of hunters returning from the war and because of an easing of the wartime shortage of am- munition and other hunting equipment. Hunting license sales have boomed in recent years. MISCELLANEOUS ALTERATIONS, custom-made clothes, remodeling of clothes. Prompt serv- ice. Hildegarde Shop, 116 E. Huron. Phone 2-4669. PERSONAL WILL THE PERSON with the "77" Iowa auto license number please phone the person you met from same locality on Monday evening. Phone 6282. ) 32 TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Young woman desiring ride to Montana on or about August 30. Contact Apt. 8, 816 Tappan St. )16 STUDENT COUPLE desire ride to Flor- ida after Aug. 15. Will share driving and expenses. Contact us: 1465 Uni- versity Terrace, Apt. 1336. )18 FLORIDA STUDENT desires ride to. Tampa area. Share expenses, driving. Would like to leave Aug. 16-18. Call Dave Wright 2-3256. )28 WANTED BOARDING home for 2 year old Jap- anese American boy. Phone 20382. )14 TWO TICKETS to Carmen. Any per- formance. Phone 28254. )43 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Green plastic raincoat Sunday at Martha Cook Tennis Court. Please call 4750 in evening. )17 LOST-8 or 9 keys on a string. Please phone 4121, Extension 393. )36 LOST-Brown leather billfold contain- .ing I.D. and Reserve cards at Wil- low Run Village. Return to J. C. Weitekamp, Dorm 1, Rm. 111, Willow Run Village. Reward. )23 LOST: Sheaffer mechanical pencil. Black with gold band. Lost any- where between Angell or University Halls and East University bus stop, or on bus itself. Treasured keepsake. Contact or write J. Chvala, West Lodge, Reward. )30 LOST-Swiss Watch from neck chain, blue cloisonne, between Rackham Building and Marshall's Drug Store. Keepsake. Reward. Phone 4121, Ext. 2137 or 26368 after 10 p.m. )45 LOST-Raincoat left in car of student from Genoa, Ohio by hitchiker. Please contact 4401 or 7603. )42 TYPEWRITERS Bought, Sold, Rented Repaired STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 SWAP-Boston-Ann Arbor. Available Sept., 4 room furnished apartment short distance M.I.T., Harvard. Want- ed: 2 bedroom aparment Ann Arbor or vicinity. Write S. E. Cleveland, 36 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass. )40 WANTED TO RENT VETERAN GRADUATE STUDENT de- sires quiet single or double room fall semester. Write Box 7, Michigan Daily. )31 MALE STUDENT desires room this fall. Will pay full semester in ad- vance. Preferably near campus. Rob- ert Stratton, 2-4401, Rm. 12, Adams House. )11 MALE STUDENT desires a room, pre- ferably single, starting in fall. Please phone Dan Dunbar, 207 Winchell, 2-4401 evenings. 15 TEACHING FELLOW and employed wife need apartment. Call Mrs. Bond, 4121 Ext. 2299 during day, 2-6779 evenings. )27 TWO WOMEN grad students, neat re- fined, would like furnished apt. by fall or end of summer session. Please call 6552. )39 MY MOMMIE and I would like lodg- ings in Ann Arbor beginning with the fa]l term of this year. Mommie is a war widow and I am a four- year-old boy. Mommie wants to com- plete her education so that we may be more certain of our future. Can you help us? Reply Box 8, Michi- gan Daily. )38 FOR SALE SPECIAL VALUE white oxford cloth shirts-button-down collar $3.00. All sizes. Also white sport shirts. Phone 8768. )74 RALEIGH 3-SPEED BICYCLE with built-in hub genterator, basket and attached lock. Good condition. Any reasonable offer. Paul Chester, 337 E. William St., Telephone 5671. )35 BEAUTIFUL YOUNG PARAKEETS and Canaries. Bird supplies and cages. 562 South 7th Street, Phone 5330. )93 ARGUS C-3 CAMERA complete with case and accessories. Call Ypsi 3596- J5 or write R. L. Weiss, 1086 Goshen Court, Willow Run. )98 MOUTON LAMB winter coat. Prac- tically new. Phone 7907 after 6 p.m. ) 24 NEW BAUCH & LOMB Binocular mic- roscope. Call 6746, Alexander. )33 1942 INDIAN--45, mileage 15,000. $350. 417 E. Liberty, call after 5:00 p.m. )44 1942 SCHULT Housetrailer; 21 feet, sleeps four completely equipped. Price $1950.00 R. H. Copithorn, Sel- lecks Trailer Park, Ypsilanti. )89 NEW UNIVERSAL portable typewriter with adjustable stand. Used four months. Price $75.00. 1372 Hanover Ct., Willow Village, Phone Y-3058J3. ) 41 Continuous from 1 P.M. ALWAYS COOL! 4 -- Today and Saturday YOU'l Love It! I- - LIONEL BARRYMORE James CRAIG ' Lucile BREMER ! Also I "GOOFY GOLF" Snapshots - News Coming Sunday "BUCK PRIVATES COME HOME" HILL AUDITORIUM Box Office Open 3 P.M. Daily Admission 45c (tax incl.) Tickets, Phone 4121, Et. 479 -- - Also - -- "CHILDREN MUST LA UG H", 30-Minute Short produced in Pre-War Poland by Jew- ish Socialist Bund on Cam- paign for Health and against Prejudice in Ghetto. WANTED TO TRADE Sunday "MIRACLE ON 34th STREET" i I p 5he l 74 66izale4 cVIA h 'Round the Corner on State HALF YEAR eI Lv. VI I '"i Begins oday! Just twice a year we have a sale like this. A clean sweep of all I spring and sumrner stock at drastic reductions of WHITE BLOUSES Chic you, in this all white tailored beauty .. . french cuffs too, for ultra rich styling. 5.05 a i. v Diamonds ..d Wedding V Le Rings 717 North University Ave. l i p : - -- 15 COATS Toppers fitted and belt- ed styles. Black and colors originally $39.95 to $59.95. Sizes 10-44. Now $19.95 and $25.00 '2 SUITS . Mostly wool in colors. Originally $29.95 to $49.95 Now $14.98 to $25.00 and More of Original Price Read and Use Daily Classifed Ads DRESSES Prints and plain colors in jersey, crepe, sheers, spun rayon. Sizes 9-15, 10-44, 1672 to 241/2. Original prices from $10.95 to $35.00. Two groups of cottons and rayons at $3.98-$5.00. =711 THE INTER -COOPERATIVE COUNCIL PRESENTS SINCLAIR LEWIS' PLAYSU ITS SUNSU ITS PINAFORES Sizes 9-16. Groups of Skirts, Sweat- ers, both cottons and , c C P . Ii mac Handbags at $2.98 - $3.98 and $5.00. Were .n 4n -I? 9S 1 11 li' AR iR. n N\A 11 rug I I iim ! 1 3