P AY, JUNE 27, 1947 THE; MI1CHIGAN lDAILY SATUTRDAY. ,fJUNE 2& 9i 1A1 T I riaa-avaaarra:a; uvi a: tiv, 1AYi i Barclay Wins Two Matches to Gain NCAA Golf Qua: rter -Finals Brown Wins, U.S. Advances At Wimbledon LONDON, June 27 -(P)- Tom Brown, a San Francisco law stu- dent, battled his way to the quar- ter-findis of the Wimbledon Ten- nis Championships with an up- hill, five-set triumph today and was joined in the round of eight by. the men who met for the title in this tournament a year ago. The third-seeded Californian outlasted Colin Long of Australia, 3-0, 13-11, 3-6, 6-1, 6-0, drawing first blood in the celebrated duel for international honors between the ranking players of the two countries now dominating the am- ateu curts of the world. Australian Wins Australia, which had duplicated the feat of the United States in sending four men into the second round of 16, also carved out a berth in the quarter-finals, how- Sever, when Goeff Brown, seeded fifth, ousted French Davis Cupper Pierre Pellizza, 6-3, 6-2, 1-6, 6-3. of Defending champion Yvon Petra of France rated no. 7 this year, reached the round of eight by turning back Jeff Robson of New Zealand, 6-2, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3, despite a spotty game and numerous double faults. Brown To Face Petra Petra, who eliminated Tom Brown in five sets in the 1946 semi-finals and then defeated Geoff Brown in the five-set final bout, will face Tom once more in the next round. Doubles favorites Jack Kramer and Bob Falkenburg of Los An- geles moved into the third round, meanwhile, by sweeping through Robert Abdesselam and Bernard Destremau of France, 6-1, 7-5, 6-3, and the second-seeded Australian pair, John Bromwieh and Dinny Pails, also came through. Patronize Your Student Book Exchange THE L G. BALFOUR STORE "Your Official Jewelers" Open every day - Monday through Friday 1:30 until 5:00 Home of the Official g, University of Michigan ring IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1319 S. University Ph. 9533 M' Trackmen To Run Today On West Coast Four Michigan trackmen will compete in the Big Nine-Pacific Coast dual meet today at Berke- ley, Cal., and two of them are good bets to come home winners. Chuck Fonville, who is the Big Nine and National Collegiate shot put champ, is the favorite to win his specialty, since he won the collegiate title last week at Salt Lake City with a heave of 54 ft. 10 7/8 in,, his best to date. Wolverine Herb Barten, who is the Big Nine half-mile king, will compete in the "880" along with his teammate, Chuck Low, who took third in the Connference championships. Barten won that race in 1:52.9, and stands a good chance of winning today. The other Michigan entry is Alex Mor- ris, two-miler who placed third in the Big Nine meet. The Michigan thinclads will leave California after the meet and travel to Lincoln, Nebraska for the National AAU champion- ships next Saturday. Joe Louis Plans To Retire in 1948 DETROIT, June 27-(P)-John Roxborough, co-manager of Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis, said today the Brown Bomber hopes to retire in 1948 and follow Gene Tunney's example of quit- ting the ring while still kingpin of the heavyweight division. "Joe is definitely committed to defend his title against' the'best possible challenger in Yankee Stadium in September," Roxbor- ough reported. He indicated Joe's opponent "will be named after July 15 af- ter Joe Baski meets Ollie Tand- berg in Stockholm July 6." Louis, who recently celebrated his 10th year as heavyweight champ, arrived here today with his softball team. He will go to Chicago Monday to await the ar- rival from Mexico City of Mrs. Louis and his month-old son, Joe, jr. Diamonds and Wedding, Rings S 717North University Ave. S 0<- ==5O< oyo-yN SPORTSCRI BBLES By ARCHIE PARSONS OR THOSE w anxious to tak weather, I would to the University1 legiate individual l .k 'ho like high-calibre collegiate athletics and are ke advantage of the rarity of sunny Ann Arbor suggest taking a stroll down South State Street golf course where the finals of the National Col- golf championships take place tomorrow. For the past week, close to 300 of the best amateur collegiate golfers in the nation have been battling it out over the tough 6,600-yard layout. Most of them are in agreement that this is one of the hardest courses they have ever played, and the first three holes will cause many of them to wake up screaming for nights to come. One golfer carded a 13 on the no. 1 hole, while another scored an11, BUT DON'T THINK these boys can't smack that pill around smart- ly. Such golfers as "Babe" Lind of Denver, third low amateur in the Master's this year, Big Bill Campbell of Princeton, who won a driving contest last Sunday with a 263-yard poke into a wind, Ok- lahoma's Charlie Coe, and Michigan's own Dave Barclay are among the best up-and-coming golfers this nation is producing. The University has done a fine job as host to this meet. There is a refreshment stand for those who want to battle the heat with a coke or two, and a checking booth open all day. If you don't care to follow the golfers around, there is a score board right behind the tenth tee, and therein lies a tale. THE BOARD was designed by a boy named Al Kimmel. Al and his father make a vocation out of scoring for the public important golf meets all over the country. His father just finished an assign- ment at the P.G.A. in Detroit, and is on the job over at Chicago, their home, in the Victory Open. I asked Al how they ever got into such a peculiar job, but outside of saying that they began 14 years ago, he merely commented that "it was just one of those things." Well, it's a nice way to see the country. Also handling the scoreboard and checking the golfers' cards is an old face around Michigan athletic circles. He is the former Wolverine golf coach, Bill Barclay, who is now handling Har- vard's basketball and golf teams and doing a fine job. Bill came out here for a vacation, but with golfers posting their cards about every three minutes from dawn to dusk the first few days, he be- gan to wonder if he had made a mistake. THE PRESS TENT, just behind the score board, started out as quite a rustic affair. Despite the telephones, telegraphs, typewriters, and other momentos of the Technological Age, two hastily procured kero- sene lamps which were used whin the tourney went on into the dark- ness the first night, gave the place a slight air of the Simple Life. While we are talking about golf, some congratulations are in order. Ever since the days when most of the present Michigan coaching staff was just a bunch of high school kids, Michigan has won a Conference championship every year, but for the last two years it has taken an 11th hour struggle by the Wolverine golf team to keep the streak alive. W HILE MOST OF US were settling down to the annual contest with the books and professors on May 31, the golfers, led by Ed Schalon, who tied for medalist honors, were coming from nine strokes behind Purdue on the final day of the tournament to cut themselves that all-important slab of Big Nine championship bacon. Bert Katzenmeyer, who is finishing up his first year as the Maze and Blue golf coach, has done a fine job, and no amount of praise should be omitted for Messrs. Schalon, Courtright, Bar- clay, Elliott, Ludolph, Kessler, and Jenswold. After all, Katzen- meyer could lead them up to the tee, but they were on their own after that. This is one of the most versatile golf teams ever assembled any- where. Courtright is a two-year captain of the wrestling team and a former NCAA and Big Nine 155-pound champ, holding seven major letters. Elliott captained the basketball team last season and plays quite a bit of football on the side,, (he has won six letters in two years), Jenswold is a former Wolverine hockey player, and Kessler is one of Ken Doherty's crack two-milers during the indoor season. Among them they have won 27 letters. 18 Tiger Hits Whip Browns; Yankees Wn Dodgers Top Braves; Giants, Cubs Lose By The Associated Press The Detroit Tigers, returning home after a disastrous Eastern road trip on which they dropped 10 out of 11 games, smashed out 18 hits today to wallop the St. Louis Browns, 11-2, in a twilight game called in the last of the eighth because of darkness. A shirt-sleeved crowd of 18,3301 fans saw the Tigers show a sur- prising amount of power in tie twilight gam.e. Roy Cullenbine and Hoot Evers hit for the circuit, Cullenb-ne get- ting his seventh of the season in the fifth with none on while Evers got his fifth in the seventh with none aboard. Every Tiger hit safely but Mul. lin, and Trucks was the winning pitcher. Meanwhile Carl Sheib, the Athletics' rookie pitcher, suffered his first loss as the league-leading Yankees whipped the A's, 7-1, behind the eight-hit pitching of Spud Chandler. The Boston Red Sox dropped further behind the Yanks by los- ing to Washington, 3-0, as Mickey Haefner shut out the Sox with seven hits. The Senators have won five out of seven from Boston this year. Over at Cleveland, Bobby Feller got his tenth win of the season as the Indians whipped the White Sox, 9-3. Feller's double, driving in three runs in the sec- ond inning, was the telling blow. Cutting loose with a 15-hit at- tack, the Brooklyn Dodgers beat the Boston Braves, 8-5, to widen their National League lead. The New York Giants also fell further behind when Skeeter New- some's grand slam homer off Clint Hartung in the second inning al- lowed the Phillies to win, 6-5. Walker Cooper, Giant catcher, got his sixth homer in five consecu- tive games, while the Giant infield made five double plays. The Pittsburgh Pirates man- aged.to turn back a hard finishing drive by the Chicago Cubs to win, 12-8, with Hank Greenberg smash- ing his 12th homer of the season. The Cards-Cincinnati results were incomplete. i NATIONAL LEAGUE Major League Standings Brooklyn .......... Boston...... . . New York ........ Chicago .......... Cincinnati ........ . St. Louis .......... Philadelphia....... Pittsburgh......... W 36 34 32 31 31 30 2'7 24 L 26 27 26 31. 32 31 36 36 AMERICAN LEAGUE GB 14 1? 4% 5 5 91/1 101E GB p'' 5 6% 614 7 714 121, New York....,.. Boston........... Philadelphia Detroit.......... Cleveland........ Washington ....... Chicago St. Louis ......... M' Captain To Meet Campbell Of Princeton in Morning Match w 38 33 31 29 27 28 30 23 L. 25 27 30 30 27 30 34 36 Bears Rip Eli In NCAA Tilt KALAMAZOO, Mich., June 27-- ()-After a story start, Californ- ia's batters teed off on virtually the entire Yale pitching staff to- day to whip the Elis 17 to 4, in the opening game of the colleg- iate "world series"-the National Collegiate Athletic Association Championship. A heavy shower, which broke just at the scheduled starting time and delayed the game 45 minutes nearly ruined the Californians and they were trailing 4-2 when the weather cleared. But in the seventh they began to hit Frank Quinn's fireball pitching and from there on it was all California's ball game. The Golden Bears belted Quinn in the eighth to take a 6-4 lead and they piled eleven runs across the plate in the ninth after the Yale ace had been lifted for a pinch-hitter. California pounded out 14 hits, three of them by Lyle Palmer and a lot of the benefit of four Yale errors of record as well as several mental lapses. After scoring three runs in the first inning when Nino Barnise couldn't control the wet ball, Yale was checked with five hits by lanky Dick Larner. For that Delicious Midnight Snack Try MILLER'S Box Lunch Golden Brown Chicken or Fried Jumbo Shrimp Home-Made Rolls and Individual Pies Call 2-7171 We Deliver Anywhere, Anytime By ARCHIE PARSONS Dave Barclay of Michigan bat- tled his way into the quartei -final round of the National Collegiate individual golf championships which get under way at 9 a.m. to- day, by virtue of a double win over Oklahoma A&M's Warren Glosser and Joe Moore of LSU on the Uni- versity links yesterday. His teammates, Pete Ellott, Bill Ludolph, and Ed Schalon, were eliminated in the match play. Ludolph lost to Warren MacCarty of San Jose State, 4 and 3, while Elliott dropped a one-up heartbreaker to Charlie Coe of Oklahoma University, one of the favorites, in the morning round. Schalon defeated Tony Langan of Syracuse, 4 and 2, in the morning, but lost out, one up, to Lou Stafford of Oregon in an afternoon affair that went two extra holes before Schalon was finally eliminated. Barclay and Glosser were all even at the end of nine holes in the morning round, but the Wolverine golfer went down one on the 12th, won the 13th, was down again on the 14th, and then won the last last three holes with two pars and a birdie. He finished with a 39- 37-76, and Glosser wound up with the same figure. Michigan's team captain from Rockford, Ill., came back in the afternoon to swamp Moore, 5 and 4, after being three up at the end of nine, and thus earned the right to play Big Bill Camp- bell of Princeton, a hard-hitting West Virginian, in the quarter- finals today. Elliott and Coe were tiedfat the turn, Elliott won the 10th, Coe captured the 12th and 13th, and they were even again when Pete took the 14th. The Wolverine went ahead on the 15th, but the Trans- Mississippi champ tied it up when he sank a 35-foot putt on the 17th green for a hirdie three. They both had a chance for birdies on the last hole, but Coe took his and the match while Elliott was down in five. Coe had a 76 while Pete scored a 39-38-78. Schalon won his morning match with Langan after being one up at the end of nine, while Ludolph lost his to MacCarty after being two down at the turn. Barclay disposed of Moore in his afternoon round after th0 Southwestern golfer had whipped Bob Harris of San Jose State, win- ner of the medal cup just the day before, and then Schalon sent his match into extra holes when he scored a beautiful eagle three to win the 18th hole after being one down. Schalon had a chance to cop the match on the 19th after Stafford played his second shot into a trap, but the Oregon golfer who took a second to "Smiley" Quick last year in the National Public Links tourney, made a beautiful recovery which rolled within two feet of the pin. Schalon's putt lipped the cup and they halved the hole. Ed's drive:on the 20th hooked into the rough, while Stafford was right down the middle. When Ed's next shot also went into the rough, it was just a matter of playing out the hole. "Babe" Lind of Denver and Oklahoma's Coe hook up today in what will probably be one of the finest matches of the year. Lind beat Howard Saunders of Ohio State, 2 and 1, in the morn- ing, and whipped MacCarty in the afternoon, 4 and 3. Coe won, 5 and 4, over Bobby Gardner of UCCA in the afternoon. Bo Wininger of Oklahoma A&M, the co-medalist with San Jose State's Harris, was another victim in the morning round when he lost to Tom Lambie of Stanford. The semi-final round will begin at 2 p.m. today, with the winners of the above four matches battling for a place in Sunday's 36-hole final. II'II M b t'-- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WING NIPPLE TOOLS are timple, fast, and accurate. Threads are easily made on long pipe, short pipe, close to a wall, and up to 150 angle per pair. Work is right on the job and hours sooner. Used with pipe vise and with rachets. Most territories open to sales. Worldliness is ad- junct and character is wanted. Wing S. Laboratory, 123 Watera St., Grass Lake, Mich. i (Continued from Page 2) at 7 p.m. The speaker meeting will be Professor for the Charles ----- - F !n ______ -_ - ._ - .. ,il M I TO OUR PATRONS! All Member Barber Shops will be closed Saturday, July 5th, in cooperation with fellow Merchants. The Ann Arbor Barbers Assn. i?,aok & *?ecS dIlite4: . .NEW RECORDINGS IN A LIGHTER VEIN THAT YOU ARE SURE TO ENJOY DURING YOUR SUMMER LEISURE . . . MENOTTI-Sebastion, Ballet Suite . . .Robin Hood Dell Orchestra, Mitropoulos TCHAIKOVSKY-Serenade for Strings, Op. 48 ..Philadelphia Orchestra, Ormandy MENDELSSOHN-Piano Music{ .. Vladimir Horowitz HANDEL-BEECHAM-The Great Elopement ...London Philharmonic Orchestra, Beecham DELIUS-Concerto for Violin and Orchestra C. Fries who will talk on the English Language Institute. Churches First Congregational Church 10:45 a.m.-Dr. Parr's subject is "A Faith Big Enough." 6:00 p.m.-Student Guild. Cost Supper. Dr. E. F. Barker will speak on "Philosophy, Religion and the New Physics." University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw: Service at 11:00 a.m. Sunday, with sermon by the Rev. Prof. W. C. Kitzerow of Concordia College, Ft. Wayne, Indiana. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club: Supper Social Sunday at 5:15 at the Center. The Lutheran Student Associa- tion will meet Sunday at 5:30 hold open house Saturday, June 309 East Washington Street. Prof. (Continued on Page 4) ART CINEMA LEAGUE PRESENTS LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION 1304 Hill Street-Henry O. Yoder, Pastor For National Lutheran Council Students 9:15 A.M.: Bible Hour at the Center. 10:30 A.M.: Worship Services in Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches. 11:00 A.M.: Worship Service in eChrist Luth- eran Chapel, Willow Run-Rev. Robert Boettger, Pastor. 5:30 P.M.: Meet in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 309 East Washington St. Prof. Paul Kauper of the Law Faculty, speaker. 4:00 P.M.: Wednesday - Tea and coffee hour at the Center. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division at Catherine The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector The Rev. John M. Shufelt, Curate The Rev. John H. Burt, Student Chaplain Miss Maxine J. Westphal, Counsellor for Women Students Mr. George R. Hunsche, Organist and Choirmaster 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 11:00 A.M.: Nursery and Kindergarten, Tat- lock Hall. 11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer. Sermon by Dr. Lewis. 5:00 P.M.: Canterbury Club Picnic and Dis- cussion. Meet at the Student Center, 408 Lawrence Street. Wednesday, 7:15 A.M.: Holy Communion (followed by breakfast at Student Center. Reservations, 5790.) UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred Scheips, Pastor (The Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Mis- souri, Ohio, and Other States) Sunday at 11:00 A.M.: Service, with sermon by the Rev. Prof. W. C. Kitzerow of Con- cordia College, Ft. Wayne, Ind., "The Greatest Division in the World." Sunday at 5:15 P.M.: Supper meeting of Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw W. P. Lemon, D.D., and James Van Pernis, Ministers Frieda Op't Holt Vogan, Director of Music Ruth Kirk, Church Worker 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship with sermon by Dr. Lemon. Topic: "Life in Head- lines." 5:00 P.M.: Summer Program "As the World Looks to a Historian." Address by Prof. Preston Slosson. Discussion and Buffet Supper follows at 6 p.m. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Ministers: James Brett Kenna and Robert H. Jongeward Music: Lester McCoy, guest choir director Irene Applin Boice, associate organist Student Activities: Kathleen M. Davis, director 9:30 A.M.: Student Seminar. Pine Room. 10:40 A.M.: Worship Service. Dr. Kenna will speak on, "Oh Master, Tread Our Streets Again."4 5:30 P.M.: Wesleyan Guild. Supper and fel- lowship hour. Summer series of The Com- munity Workshop. Dr. Kenna will talk on "No Time For Trifles." dteteasO@ by Eavorite Firns Corp. Be gdadyou have Two Feet! Smartness is the reason for buying sports shoes. So, get Nunn-Bush shoes . ... Ankle-fash- ioned to give many added miles of smartness! all /- Crr MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan i :$ I . I _ v _ _ ., _ __ .... !