28, 1949 THE -M'I HI GA ~A~IL WAGE .. .. . .. . . ll: The MORNING REPORT by MERLE LEVIN, SPORTS EDITOR HAPPIEST COACH ON THE Michigan staff these days is golf mentor Bert Katzenmeyer. The youthful head man, whose charges romped to the West- ern Conference championship this spring has five talented letter- men returning next spring including Rog Kessler who finished fourth in the Big Ten, Chuck Hauser who finished sixth, Bob I Olson the young basketball ace who along with another returning veteran, Keith LeClair, went to the third round of the NCAA match play tournament and Bob MacCallum. As if this isn't enough, Katzenmeyer had two of the finest young golfers to arrive at Michigan in a long, long time on his freshman squad last spring. They are Dean Lind, 1948 USGA National Junior Champion, who has been making mincemeat of the best opposition the Chicago area has to offer this summer and lanky Dick Evans who won the Ohio Amateur Golf Championship a couple of weeks ago, beating defending champion Harold Paddock, the perennial Ohio titlist, in the process. * * * * WHILE KATZENMEYER is smiling, head basketball coach Ernie McCoy is contemplating the 1949-50 schedule, one of the tough- est hardwood schedules Michigan has ever had, with a determined grimness. The Wolverines play a pair of games with the speedy hoop- sters from North Carolina State, meet the Miami (O.) Redskins, always a power among the so-called smaller colleges in basketball, and are the guest team at the Big Seven round robin tournament. That means the Wolverines will come up against such teams as Oklahoma, Kansas, Kansas State and Iowa State. The- latter will be remembered as the team that dropped the Wolverines twice before they went on to win the Big Nine championship in 1948. After that the Maize and Blue returns to battle against the Big Ten teams which are getting tougher every year. v HERB BARTEN, WHOSE running ranged from the ridiculous to the sublime after a post-Olympic heel injury is contemplating a return to action under the colors of the powerful San Francisco 'Olympic Club next season. Barten couldn't break two minutes during the early part of the outdoor season this spring but he began to go as the season wore on and set a new Michigan varsity record of 1:50.4 at the NCAA tournament this June. If Barten hooks on wtih the West Coast outfit he will become a teammate of Fortune Gordien, the record setting discus thrower from Minnesota. * * * * R Gene Derricotte has his work cut out for him when he joins the Cleveland Browns after the All-Star game in Chicago, August 12. Coach Paul Brown has intimated that Gene must beat out Edgar (Special Delivery) Jones if he hopes to win a job as an offensive back. Otherwise Gene will be used solely on defense. Jones, a former All-American from Pittsburgh, has been an all-league back with the Browns for three years and hasn't shown signs of slipping, but if+Derricotte can escane the injury jinx which has long hounded him, 'he must be accorded a good chance of winning the job. * * * * BOB CHAPPUIS will lead the Chicago Hornets into Toledo for an exhibition game with the champion Browns on Aug. 14. It will be the first time the ex-Michigan All-American has strutted his stuff in Toledo since he was a schoolboy sensation there in the early forties. Matt Mann III will hop a fast plane to the West Coast as soon as he winds up the summer school term in order to compete in the National AAU outdoor swimming championships. Swimming mentor Matt Mann is entering a team from his Camp Chikopi summer swimming school and Matty should plan to give his genial father a helping hand. "Bumpy" Jones, the 15 year-old swimming sensation from Detroit will also accompany the team and Mann who has been tutoring the youngster for years will be a very interested onlooker when Bumpy struts his stuff against the nation's best. Fletcher Gilders who set a new national high school pole vault record at Detroit's Northwestern High last spring and was also a scholastic diving champion will enter Ohio State this fall after failing to make the necessary grades to enter Michigan. Lured there by the beautiful Ohio scenery. Major League Standings. Cards Bums Keep Pace, Whip Chicgw- ST. LOUIS-The St. Louis Car- dinals took full advantage of Hank Borowy's wildness to push across three runs in each of the first two innings for a 7 to 3 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies last night. Two home runs accounted for the tallies off the offerings of Cardinal hurler Red Munger who got his ninth victory of the sea- son. * * * - Dodgers 7, Chicago 3 CHICAGO-The Brooklyn Dod- gers' longest losing streak of the season ended at four games yester- day as the Brooks routed the Chi- cago Cubs, 7-3. Home runs by Gil Hodges and Bruce Edwards featured the Dod- gers' 11-hit assault against Dutch Leonard, Warren Hacker and Bob Rush. Hodges broke a 1-1 tie with his 14th homer in the fourth inning with Jackie Robinson on base. The Dodgers sewed up the game in the seventh with a three run drive on a walk, Gene Hermanski's triple, Duke Snid- er's double and another two- bagger by Hodges. Edwards con- nected for the circuit in the eighth. Don Newcombe started for the Dodgers and although he pitched a good -game, he became the ninth straight Dodger pitcher to fail to go the distance. Newcombe fanned ten and walked only two. The big Negro righthander was lifted in favor of workhorse Erv, Palica in the ninth after yielding a homer to Herm Reich, hitting a batter and granting a single to Hal Jeffcoat. -* * * Braves 9, Reds 7 CINCINNATI - The Boston Braves had to travel 13 innings yesterday to subdue the seventh- place Cincinnati Reds, 9-7, and it was Mary Rickeri's two-run homer in the fourth extra frame that won the game. Bud Lively, the fourth Cin- cinnati pitcher and the loser, held the Braves to one hit from the ninth to the 13th frame. After two were out, he walk- ed Eddie Stanky and Rickert promptly lined one into the right field stands. *~* ~ Giants 8, Pirates 3 PITTSBURGH-New York's Gi- ants evaded sixth place in the National League standings yester- day by defeating Pittsburgh, 8 to 3, on the fine relief pitching of Kirby Higbe, recently acquired from the Pirates. Higbe took over the hurling from starter Clint Hartung in the fifth inning and gave up only four hits the remainder of the way. The Giants moved out in front in the seventh when four singles, Sid Gordon's double and Wes Westrum's home run with two mates on base meant five runs. During the barrage Monte Bas- gall, Pirate second baseman, was hit in the face when a batted ball took a bad hop and was forced to retire. Willard Marshall, Giant outfielder, also had to leave the game during the inning when a foul off his own bat hit him on his right foot. 3 DAYS ONLY! StatsToday! Winl V To Hold Lead; , 16 TigOersSp' lit Groth Hammers Six Hits; Red Sox Down Chicago WASHINGTON - Detroit bat- tered Washington pitching for 32 hits last night in a twilight-night double-header but got only a split as the Senators captured the first game 7-6, to snap an 11-game los- ing streak. The Tigers compiled 17 hits behind Freddie Hutchinson's 4-hit pitching to take the second game, 11-0. ONE TOO MANY-Chicago Cub pitcher Johnny Schmitz (53) is tagged out by Brooklyn third base- man Billy Cox as he tries to stretch a fourth inning double into a three-bagger in Tuesday's game at Wrigley Field. Umpire Bill Stewart is right on top of the play which apparetly didn't faze Schmitz. He went on to blank the Dodgers, 6-0. TOO SOON, TOO SOON! Rain Halts Yank-Tribe Game in Fourth I. NEW YORK-A heavy down- pour washed out the second ofr an important three game series between the league leading New York Yankees and runner-up Cleveland yesterday.v The teams were in a 4-4 dead- lock when the downpour halted hostilities after four innings of> play. * * * A DISAPPOINTED crowd of 47,- 596 paying customers waited hope- fully in the shelter of the mam- moth stadium for the skies to clear. But after one hour and 57 minutes, when the downpour : showed no signs of slackening, ,; : 'j. chief umpire Bill McGowan offi- cially called the game.' The washout left the Yankees still three games in front of Cleveland. No announcement was made when the game would be replayed. The Yankees got off to a 4-0 lead in the first inning, blasting Bob Feller off the mound beforeJ he could retire a batter. Tommy .. Henrich, playing despite a broken toe on his right foot, produced the big wallop, a towering home run with two teammates aboard. * * * THE TRIBE GOT half of the runs back in the second and third and relief pitcher Sam Zoldak. innings on homers by Joe Gordon The Indians evened up mat- ters in the fourth, routing Ed Lopat and filling the bases on reliefers Clarence Marshall and Joe Page, before they were re- tired. A double by Mickey Vernon and Larry Doby's single to right ac- counted for one run. Doby's steal of second, a sacrifice and man- ager Lou Boudreau's long fly brought in the Cleveland center fielder. I-M SOFTBALL Semi-Finals Hard Rocks 10, Greene House 0. Washington grasped a 4-0 lead off Lou Kretlow in the first game, but the Tigers battled back to batter Sid Hudson and forge ahead, 5-4, with two runs in the third inning and three more in the fifth. The Senatorsimoved into com- mand at 6-5 in the fifth when Jake Early singled across two runs. Eddie Yost's single and Eddie Robinson's double fashioned a 7-5 lead for Washington in the eighth. Detroit scored with two out in the iainth on singles by Johnny Grot h, Johnny Lipon and Freddie Hutrhinson, but Ray Scarborough disposed of Don Kolloway on a pop fly to capture his eighth vic- tory. Uookie Johnny Groth led the Tigers' assault on Joe Haynes, Lloyd Hittle and Al Gettel in the second game. He contributed a double and three singles, while Connie Berry and Don Kolloway each got three hits. Groth had a total of six hits in the two games. * * * A's, Browns Split PHILADELPHIA - The Phila- delphia Athletics spotted the St. Louis Browns five runs in the first inning and then came from be- hind twice to win the second game of the twi-night doubleheader 8-6 after taking the opener 7-3. The twin victory ran the A's winning streak to five straight. Bosox 6, .Chicago 0. BOSTON - Lefty Mel Parnell won his 14th game of the season for the Boston Red Sox and his third shutout by holding the Chi- JOHNNY GROTH on spree cago WhitedSox to three scattered hits yesterday for a 6-0 victory. The Bosox collected all but one of their 11 hits off Randy Gumpert, Chicago's starting pitcher, who gave way in the eighth for a pinch hitter. Par- nell scored the 11th hit, his third single of the day, off Gum- pert's successor, Max Surkont. It was Parnell's fourth straight victory and his 17th complete game in 21 starts this year. Hard Rocks Win Crown IM Basketball competition came to an end yesterday with both the regular league title and the play- offs being captured by the Hard Rocks. Sporting a record of four wins and no defeats in the regular com- petition, the champions defeated the second place Sportsmen in two straight games for the title. The Sportsmen had a record of three wins and one defeat. The All Stars were third witlh a record of 2-2; fourth were the Bums with 1-3: and the Mich- Coop finished fifth with a 0-4 rec- ord. Finals JOE GORDON Hard Rocks vs. Chemistry . homer wasted Dept. 5:30 today, S. Ferry Field. ' FOR SALE GOING HOSTELING? - Raleigh three speed, generator and lights. In excel- lent condition. $40.00. Call 2-7787. )117 WHY WALK when you can ride? Man's bike, A-i condition. Don Lauer, 3-1511, ext. 2492. )97 ALMOST NEW (used 3 wks.) Kenmore electric roaster and 2-burner hotplate, both for $25.00. Man's English-type bike, $10. 820 Church St., Ph. 2-7572. )123 PORTABLE CAMP STOVE, 2-burner, al-, most new, $7, with gas can. 1356 Geddes, 2nd floor, 3-8 p.m. )124 SCHWINN light weight girls bicycle, 3 speed gears, hand brakes. One year old, good condition. Also portable. long play or regular speed phono- graph, small three-way portable radio. All new and in good shape. Box 387. New Women's Residence. )114 REDUCED PRICES--Men's loafers $3.88; U.S. Navy T-shirts 49s; wash slacks $2.66; sport shirts, short-sleeves $1.69; men's sport shorts $1.49; all wool swim trunks $1.49. Open 'til 6:30. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )113 FOR SALE COMPLETE SET Kroyden Golf Clubs- 21711 E. Washington, Ph. 2-7318. )107 APT SIZE WASHER $20; latest Webster International Dictionary, $15; recon- ditioned Woodstock typewriter, $15. Phone 2-9706. )119 AMATEUR RADIO transmitting parts, one complete ten meter transmitter, exceptional values. Call 8774 and ask for Keith-evenings. )112 PARRAKEETS make delightful, inex- pensive pets. Easily trained to talk sand whistle. Also canaries, bird sup- plies and cages. Mrs. Rufi ns, 562 So. Seventh. )88a ___ TRANSPORTATION DRIVING MONTANA Aug. 13-14. Riders all or part way. Byers 2-4951. )115 WANTED-Three Passengers to Yellow- stone Park. Leaving Aug. 14. Phone Shirley Austin, 8146. )110 WANTED TO BUY HAVE UP TO $15 to purchase bicycle, any make. Call Don Schmidt, 2-4538, after 6:30. )125 WANTED TO RENT SINGLS OR DOUBLE ROOM wanted for fall near Engine School. Call Jim Wright at 2-9431 afternoon or evening or write 814 E. Univ. )120 BUS. AD. STUDENT and employed wife desire 2 or 3 rm. furnished apartment for fall. No children. Write Bill Jack- son, 515 Edgemoor, Kalamazoo, Mich. Or phone Allen Hilliard at 2-3343. )122 WANTED WANTED - Ride to Washington D.C., Aug. 13. Share expenses but not driv- ing. Call Fred, "7543. )118 WORK-Full time, any kind. Contact Cal Leedy at 8257. )92 LOST and FOUND LOST-A blue enamel Chinese charm bracelet. Reward. Phone 2-5579. )121 WALLET LOST in Library July 20. Contents needed desperately. Keep money. Return to Gen. Library or send to Irene Zavell, 826 Tappan. )111 BUSINESS SERVICES STUDENTS MAY ORDER subscriptions to TIME or LIFE at the student rates to be sent to their home address or any other address they choose. As long as the subscription is in the stu- dent's name, the Student Rate ap- plies. Order now-pay when billed. Student Periodical Agency. Phone 6007. )116 LEARN TO DANCE JIMMIE HUNT DANCE STUDIOS 209 S. State St. Ph. 8161 ) 5B GROUP PICTURES taken. Candid wedding pictures a specialty. C. W. Nichols, 711 S. Division. Ph. 5333. TYPEWRITING SERVICE Student reports, theses, dissertations. Phone 6197. )28 WE BIND THESES, term papers and disserta**ns in a variety of styles and colors. OLSEN'S BINDERY 325 E. Hoover Phone 2-7976 )1 LAUNDRY - Washing and/or ironing. Done in my own home. 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