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Mermen
Set
World
Record
in
300-Meter
Better Ohio State Mark
In AA U Preliminaries
S PORT SCRAPBOOK
f;t IRWIN ZUCKER
MAYBE WOMEN ought to be eligible for varsity athletic squads.
We don't recommend that muscular co-eds be permitted to try
out for Fritz Crisler's football team or Cliff Keen's wrestling souad.
But what about the other sports which involve less bodily con-
tact? Like golf, for example. No kidding, some of those gals-es-
pecially the young 'uns-really know how to wield those irons.
Fifteen-year-old Suzanne Kessler, who hopes to be making offi-
cial visits to Wolverine classrooms around 1951, yesterday captured,
the Ann Arbor women's golf championship by defeating Mrs. Agnes
Wilson, 3 and 2.
The new champ, only a freshman at Ann Arbor High, was
runner-up in last year's city finals.
SUSIE, OR "SIS" as she is called, knows her way around the links
a la Babe Zaharias, thanks to some early tutoring on the fine
points of the game from her grandfather, Otto Barth, and her broth-
er Roger, an outstanding member of the 1947 Wolverine links squad.
When Sis clinched her raich on the 16th hole at the Muni-
cipal course, she received a mighty hug from her mother, who
dropped out of the tourney in the second round of competition.
The admiring gallery also included her father, Clarence, and
grandfather.
Rog says he was with Sis in spirit. The Wolverine golf star was
unable to witness his sister's brilliant triumph; he was on duty at the
University course where he is employed on a full-time basis during the
summer.
The entire Kessler clan will be rooting for Rog when he enters
the Hearst Invitational at Detroit Monday. He recently lost to
Bob Abrahams, Northwestern linkster, in the final round of the
Chicago District Association's 12th annual junior open tourney.
Y THE WAY, the Ann Arbor women's tourney also saw some fine
competitive play from Mrs. Ray Courtright and Mary Ann Court-
right, mother and sister, respectively, of Bill Courtright, Michigan
golf star and champion wrestler.
Betty Jane Courtright, Bill's other sister who was defending
champ prior to yesterday's finals, did not participate in this year's
event, Instead, she continued her ice-skating training at Lake
Placid, N.Y.
Which all proves that women are becoming more and more ver-
satile in the world of sports. Yes, sir, they're here to stay!
IKE OR MONTGOMERY?:
LioiweightB -Monday
Holiday, Sohl
To Record in;
and Weinberg Splash Way
3:16.6; Gain Recognition
TYLER, Tex., Aug. 1-(IP)-TheI Ohio State dominated the three-
FULL SPEED AHEAD-Here's the
Michigan 300-meter medley relay
team that set a new world record
yesterday, covering the distance in
3:16.6. Harry Holiday (left),
backstroker; Dick Weinberg ( cen-
ter), freestyle; and Bob Sohl
(right), backstroke.
McKenley Will
Wear Jamaica
Colors in '48
NEW YORK, Aug. 1-.(/)-Herb
McKenley, University of Illinois
sprinter, will represent his native
Jamaica in the 1948 Olympic
games in London, AAU Secretary
Danniel J. Ferris disclosed today,
ending speculation that the dusky
speedster might run for the Unit-
ed States.
A query to the U.S. Department
of Justice Immigration and Nat-
uralization Service produced the
reply that McKenley "is in the
United States on a temporary visa'
and is not eligible to proceed to-
wards naturalization," Ferris said.
McKenley, holder of the nation-
al AAU 400-meter and National
Collegiate quarter-mile titles, has
said on several occasions that he
might try for a place on the U.S.
Olympic team
MAJOR LEAGUE RESUME:
'HutCh' Beats Red Sox, 3-1;
Brook Streak Snapped at 13
By The Associated Press
Freddie Hutchinson last night
pitched and batted the Detroit
Tigers to a 3-1 victory over the
Red Sox before 32,286 paid fans.
The loss left the Sox 12 games in
back of the leading Yankees and
only a half game ahead of the
third place Tigers.
Hoot Evers, Eddie Mayo and
Bob Swift, singled in succession in
the sixth inning with one out.
Hutchinson then picked on the
first pitch offered him by starter
Dave Ferriss and whacked it into
the right field corner for a three
bagger.
The Indians climaxed an uphill
battle in the ninth inning by scor-
ing on Catcher Jim Hegan's triple
and Joe Bockman's fly to break
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 1-(/P)-
It was all work and no play again
today for Ike Williams and Bob
Montgomery as the dual light-
weight champions honed for their
finest edge in Monday night's fight
that will settle the long argu-
ART CINEMA LEAGUE
Presents
g'irl S
kc s a S by PR
Fri., Sat., Aug., 2 -- 8:30 P.M.
HILL AUDITORIUM
Box Office Open 3 P.M. Daily
Admission 45c (tax incl.)
Tickets, Phone 4121, Ext. 479
--_-_- Also ----
"CHILDREN
UST LAUGH"
30-Minute Short produced
in Pre-War Poland by Jew-
ish Socialist Bund on Cam-
paign for Health and against
Prejudice in Gheto.
ment as to which is the rightful
wearer of the crown.
The Williams-Montgomery feud
has been the hottest thing in
Philly fistic circles since the two
dusky sluggers first came to kayo
prominence. Ike, of Trenton, N.J.,
hadhis biggestiguns spiked the
January night in 1944 when the
Philadelphia Bobcat draped him
unconscious over the ropes in the
last 30 seconds of the 12th and
final round in their only meet-
ing.
THE L. G. BALFOUR
STORE
Your Official Jewelers"
Open every day -
Monday through Friday
1:30 until 5:00
Home of the Official
Unjiersity of Michigan ring>
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
1319 S. University Ph. 9533
Prices
25c until 5 p.m.
30c after 5 p.m.
- Today
"THE BEGINNING
OF THE END"
and
"SINGING IN THE CORN"
-- Tomorrow
"SONG OF THE SOUTH"
and
"MAGNIFICENT ROGUE"
+ Classified Advertising +
PERSONAL MISCELLANEOUS
WILL THE PERSON with the "77" ALTERATIONS, custom-made clothes,
Iowa auto license number please remodeling of clothes. Prompt serv-
phone the person you met from ice. Hildegarde Shop, 116 E. Huron.'
same locality on Monday evening. Phone 2-4669.
Phone 6282. ) 32-
WANTED TO RENT
TRANSPORTATION VETERAN GRADUATE STUDENT de-
sires quiet single or double room fall
WANTED: Small seat for big person to semester, Write Box 7, Michigan
west coast leaving vicinity August Daily.)31
15. Telephone P. Eisenhart, 2-2521, _.
Ext. 434. )48 MALE STUDENT desires room this
WANTD- fall. Will pay full semester in ad-
WANTED vance. Preferably near campus. Rob-
ert Stratton, 2-4401, Rm. 12, Adams
TWO TICKETS to Carmen. Any per- House. )11
formance.' Phone 28254. )43
TEACHING FELLOW and employed
COED TO EXCHANGE board and room wife need apartment. Call Mrs.
for part time housework. State ref- Bond, 4121 Ext. 2299 during day,
erences. Reply Box 25, Daily. )46 2-6779 evenings. )27
'40 TO '42 CAR in A-1 condition. Reply TWO WOMEN grad students, neat re-
Box 11, Michigan Daily or 1367 Erv- fined, would like furnished apt. by
ing Ct., Willow Run Village. )47 fall or end of summer session. Please
call 6552. ) 39
ROOMS FOR FOUR veterans for fall ____2 )39_
term. Willing to pay for August "if MY MOMMIE and I would like lodg-
necessary. Price is no object. Notify ings in Ann Arbor beginning with
Box 10, Michigan Daily. )50 the fall term of this year. Mommie
is a war widow and I am a four-
LOST AND FOUND year-old boy. Mommie wants to com-
plete her education so that we may
LOST- or 9 keys on a string. Please be more certain of our future. Can
phone 4121, Extension 393. ) 36 you help us? Reply Box 8, Michi-
LOST-Swiss Watch from neck chain, gan Daily. )38
blue cloisonne, between Rackham MALE GRADUATE student, veteran,
Building and Marshall's Drug Store. desires single or double room fall
Keepsake. Reward. Phone 4121, Ext. semester. Paul Roten, 207 Winchell
2137 or 26368 after 10 p.m. )45 House, 2-4401. )49
LOST-Raincoat left in car of student VETERAN GRADUATE student and
from Genoa, Ohio by hitchiker. Please wife teaching in nursery school de-
contact 4401 or 7603. )42 sire apartment. Reply Box 9, Mich-
WANTED TO TRADE igan Daily. -51
SWAP-Boston-Ann Arbor. Availab FOR SALE
Sept., 4 room furnished apartment BEAUTIFUL YOUNG PARAKEETS and
short distance M.I.T., Harvard. Want- Canaries. Bird supplies and cages.
ed: 2 bedroom aparment Ann Arbor 562 South 7th Street, Phone 5330. )93
or vicinity. Write S. E. Cleveland, -___________________
36 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass. )40 ARGUS C-3 CAMERA complete with
case and accessories. Call Ypsi 3596-
LOST--K. & E. Slide Rule. Name Ed- J5 or write R. L. Weiss, 1086 Goshen
win H. Halliwell on case. Call 2- Court, Willow Run. )98
6156. ) 52
MOUTON LAMB winter coat. Prac-
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C. Dlial nds NEW BAUCH & LOMB Binocular mic-
Diamonds roscope. Call 6746, Alexander. )33
and NEW UNIVERSAL portable typewriter
OJ with adjustable stand. Used four
Wedding months. Price $75.00. 1372 Hanover
Ct., Willow Village, Phone Y-3058J3.
III ~ ~ uE~ g R in g s J _ __-)41
7eFURNITURE-Complete 3 room suite.
p 717 North University Ave. I' 2 pirchase price at Willow Village.
-->o<-->o<-->o<-->o<-->< > i Phone AA 20833.
Ili . -- - - - - fi-l- l
a 3-3 tie and defeat the front-
running Yankees, 4-3.
Dick Fowler struck out eight
men and had only one bad inning
tonight but that was enough for
the St. Louis Browns to reach
him for four hits and a 4-1 vic-
tory over the Athletics. Bob Mun-
crief went the route for the
Browns and received credit for
his sixth triumph.
Early Wynn limited the White
Sox to seven hits in capturing his
12th victory of the season, 8-1,
for Washington. It marked the
Senators' first win over Chicago in
seven games here this year.
Catcher Clyde McCullough, long
time nemesis of the Brooklyn
Dodgers, ended the Brooks' long-
est winning streak since 1924 to-
day by belting a two-run homer
with two ,out in the ninth to pro-
vide the Cubs with a 10-8 victory
over the National League pace-
setters.
McCullough's clout, which
landed atop the ramp in leftfield,
halted the Dodgers' consecutive
win streak at 13 games. The vic-
tory was only the Cubs' third in
16 meetings with the Dodgers this
season.
Murry Dickson won his own ball
game, 6 to 1, over Schoolboy Rowe,
smashing out a fifth-inning single
that scored the deciding run for
the Cardinals over the hillies but
Whitey Kurowski made it a one-
sided affair with four runs driven
in on two homers.
The Cincinnati Reds split a twin
bill with Boston, scoring the
winning marker on a pair of
singles and an error to take the
12 inning nightcap 3-2 after the
Braves had won the opener 4-2.
A double by Bill Rigney and a
balk by Mel Queen, former New
York Yankee pitcher, ,scored the
winning run in the sixth inning
as the Giants edged the Pitts-
burgh Pirates 2-1. Dave Koslo
went the route for the Giants,
University of Michigan 300-meter
medley relay team splashed to a,
new National record today by go-
ing the distance in 3:16.6 in pre-1
liminaries of the National A.A.U.
Outdoor swimming meet.
It was more than four seconds
faster than Ohio State's team
swam last year in setting the Na-
tional mark at 3:20.7. It also will
be recognized as a world's record.
This is the first year the medley,
relay has been admitted to world
recognition.
All Pitch In
The Wolverine medley trio con-
sisted of breastroker Harry Holi-
day, backstroker Bob Sohl, and
freestyler Dick Weinberg.
In preliminaries of the 200 me-
ter free style this afternoon, de-
fending champion and record
holder Bill Smith of Ohio State
paced the qualifiers with a time
of 2:14.3, a tenth of a second fast-
or than he made last year in win-
ning the championship.
He was almost three seconds!
faster than the second best time
turned in by Paul Girdes of the
New Haven (Conn.) Swim Club.
Others qualifying for the finals
were Peter Pwolinson, Washing-
ton Athletic Club; Fred Taioli,
San Francisco Olympic Club;
Charles Oda, Hawaii Swimming
Club; Robert I w a m o to, Hawaii
Swim Club; Walter Ris, Univer-
sity of Iowa, and Alberto Isaac,
Mexican Swimming Federation.
Hirose Fails
A major surprise was the fail-
ure of Halo Hirose of Ohio State,
second last year, to qualify. Hi-
rose had a time of 2:21.1, more
than a second out of the running.
(Three Leaders in Each League)
AB H Pet.
Walker, Phillies 343 121 .353
Boudreau, Indians 308 103 .334
Gustine, Pirates 379 125 .330
Kell, Tigers 355 117 JSE
DiMaggio, Yankees 361 119 .330
Cooper, Giants 313 101 .323
* * *
RUNSBATTED IN
AMERICAN LEAGUE
meter diving trials, placing four
of the six men in the finals. Bruce
Harlan of Ohio State, the defend-
ing champion, piled up 293.8
points to lead the qualifiers. Mil-
ler Anderson of Ohio State was
second with 285.05. Others quad-
ifying for the finals were: Dr.
Sammy Lee, Pasadena (Calif.)
Athletic Club; James Strong, Ohio
State; Joe Marino, San Francisco
Olympic club, and John Simpson,
Ohio State.
Ohio State has tke second best
time in the medley relay with
3:22.3.
U.S. Olympic
Swim Squad
Strengthened
TYLER TEX., Aug. 1-(P)-
Entries in the National AAU
swimming and diving meet
soared to 184 today and AAU
officials said this was the larg-
est in history for the Outdoor
championships.
The officials also predicted
that the meet here would pro-
duce America's strongest Olym-
pics aquatic team.
"We have the quality," said
Max Ritter of New York, a
member of the swimming com-
mittee and secretary-treasurer
of the International Amateur
Swimming Federation.
Ritter and other officials at-
tributed America's great field
to the accent on swimming in
the armed forces during the
war. "The war produced more
fine swimmers than anything,"
said Ritter. "You know it was
much of an amphibious war."
Sct tModern
- Through Saturday -
H IS P RIVAT E
LIFE A PUBLIC
catidid!
it
I
-- Last Times Today -
LIONEL BARRYMORE
"DARK
DELUSION".
Continuous
from 1 P.M. COOL!
Starts Sunday -
Williams, Red Sax
DiMaggio, Yankees
Henrich, Yankees
* * *
71
70
65
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Mize, Giants
Marshall, Giants
Cooper, Giants
HOME RUNS
Williams, Red Sox
Heath, Browns
Gordon, Indians
Mize, Giants
Marshall, Giants
Kiner, Pirates
84
80
77
23
20
18
31
27
25
PAGE THREE
4edley
Sports
Round-up
KALAMAZOO, Mich., Aug. 1;-
(A')-Two southerners - Herbert
(Buddy) Behrens of Fort Lauder-
dale, Fla., and Richard Mouledous
of New Orleans, La.-graduated
comfortably today to the finals of
the national junior tennis champ-
ionship.
The two shotmakers, neither of
whom has ever won the crown,
will grapple for the title in a
scheduled five-set affair tomor-
row.
PEORIA, Ill., Aug 1-(YP)-De-
fending champion Al Mengert of
Spokane, Wash., and Gene Litt-
ler of San Diego, Calif., today
emerged as finalists in the Na-
tional Junior Chamber of Com-
merce golf tournament after
rugged semi-final clashes,
* * *
MUSKEGON, Mich., Aug. 1-
()P)-A small but outstanding field
of women golfers Saturday will
tee off at Muskegon Country
Club in the first Muskegon Coun-
try club invitational 36-hole med-
al play tournament.
CHESHIRE, Conn., Aug. 1-
(M)--The new Frank (Fireball)
Sinkwich, 40 pounds lighter
than he was a year ago, and
"anxious to get going," today
excited Coach Ray Flaherty and
his aides as the New York Yan-
kee footballers opened a montd
of pre-season drills on the
Cheshire Academy Field.
Flaherty, after watching the
blond Sinkwich, an All-American
back at the University of Georg-
ia in 1941 and 1942, predicted that
Frank "can be the best football
player in the country this fall,
and I'd say he's going to make it."
Major League Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB W L Pct. GB
Brooklyn 63 37 .630 - New York 65 33 .663 -
New York 50 42 .543 9 Boston 52 44 .542 12
St. Louis 52 44 .542 9 Detroit 50 43 .538 121
Boston 51 46 .526 101 Philadelphia 49 49 .500 16
Cincinnati 48 53 .475 15 Cleveland 44 45 .489 16Y2
Chicago 45 52 .464 1612 Washington 43 50 .462 19r'
Pittsburgh 40 57 .412 2112 Chicago 42 57 .424 231,
Philadelphia 40 58 .408 22 . St. Louis 35 59 .372 28
* * * * * *
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Chicago 10, Brooklyn 8 * Detroit 3, Boston 1
St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 1 Cleveland 4, New York 3
Cincinatti 2, 3; Boston 4, 2 Washington 8, Chicago 1
New York 2, Pittsburgh 1 St. Louis 4, Philadelphia 1
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