THE ,ICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. MARCH 26, 1927 J ...,......, R +ru""" rr .. PHILADELPHIA NATIONALS BOAST IfnAn Ex-Tiger Coaches InBTFEw STAR PERFORMERS THIS SEASON ISID[LEASED W1 F[M CHT'oast Baseball Team re Selected On I eam 1' Rounding Into Fine Form .. nee jive; But ltaps Not Hit Its Batting Third Stride I Games Thus Far .EST GILBERTREPORTS. st, second and ::.. r . .,,, ~nee1~se"b 1 ichigan's baseball toanmis round- ence basketball n.1.f olsb ct ie a lug rnto fie form," Coach} Fisher said r'. d two Mchigan yesterday, although the players have nd BeIjnie not yet hit their batting strides." t :w:ard positions Only four men, Corriden, Ooster-. named Captain laan, Pucklewartz, and Weintraub ard on his third 1have shown much batting ability. WOLVERINE TANK CAPTAIN RANKS AS FASTESTCOLLEGE SWIMMER However it is still early in the sea-I son, and .the men wlil probably im- prove as soon as the weather warms up, according to the coach. Gilbert, football star, who reported last year but was forced to quit the; squad because of illness, has again returned for the baseball season, and is expected to lmake a strong bid forl a Varsityposition. Gilbert is rated as a strong hitter, Coach Fisher said,, and although he did not show excep- tionally well in the infield last year, he is expected to prove a good manI in the outfield. The men-who are to make the southern trip, scheduled to start April 8, Will not be named .ore than two or three days prior to the date stt for leaving. IOWA CITY-Coach Barry of Iowa placed Harrigan as forward on his first all-Conference *team, and Oos-1 terbaam in the same position on his second tean. -II Freshman track candidates I will meet at 2:30 o'clock today at Yost field house to select the j team captain, Coach Hoyt an- nounced yesterday. All are urg- ed to be present. j Paul "Buck" Samson, giant Wolver- every -s ine swim captain, and Charles "Rev- ous tim ere" Paddock. still the greatest living Union p sprinter, are undoubtedly the fastest As a humans on "land and sea" ever de- is equa veloped at American colleges. mark f Jackson V. Scholz, former Uni- demons; versity of Missouri dashman, and Ro- i8'2:- land Locke, of Nebraska, may chal- set by F lenge the supremacy of Paddock(, butemy, in only last season's Yale captain, "Jim" tis o Bronson, is qualified in any degree to, at the dispute the title bestowed on Coach bothwi Matt Mann's pride, Paul Samson, U morrow '28M. quire r Bronson holds two records which ferenci Samson has been unable to touch, time of only these two, the 50 and 100 yard place H free style marks at :23 3-5 and :53 Sams 2-5, respectively, preventinig him from Coach1 possessing every single national in- who too tercollegiate marks from the 40 to be coul( 440 yard distance both in the long 100 afte and short pool. Toledo. While on his ay to the 440 recent- Mann, ly, Samson start d his record smash- "I don't ing feats by displacing the existing say abc standard for the 220 yard mark, held everyth by Howell, of Northwestern, at 2:20.5 Andt with the excellent mark of 2:19.3 and it with then continued on to the 440, clocked "A" re at the finish in 5:05 3-5, more than school seven seconds better thtn the form- er mark made by Breyer, of North- western, in 1924. ST. I Against Wagner, a teammate, and that th Captain Zaiser of Indiana, Bronson's offered 220 mark is the longpool, 2:21.8, fell fy Stew toppling before the Wolverine star Browns who negotiated the furlong in 2.17 1-5. BLOC Hawkins, of Princeton, formerly Indiana held the 440 yard mark in the long forwar pool, 5:17 made in 1924, but this is season. slower than Samson's recognized mark of 5:12 3-5, which again is 6 2-5 sec- onds slower than Samson's final trial PAL] before leaving for the BiK Ten meet capture on Wednesday, when he astounded tournai ;wim critic with the miracul- e of 5:06 1-5 in the 25 yard ool. sprinter the Michigan leader lly as good as his collegiate or the 40 in the short pool trates. His official record, displaced the time of :1811--) Rule, of the' U. S. Naval acii d- 1924. officialdConference records are 2~20 and 440 yard distance but 11l undoubtedly bie lowered to- at Urbana. Big Ten rules re- ecords to be made in the Con- meet or else Saumsoh's oticial t :23.9 for the 50 would re- Iirschbeger's standard of :24.1. on is entirely a product of Matt Mann of the University, k him under his tutlage when d not "break a minute" in the er graduating from Scott high, In gratitude to "Daddie" Samson said when questioned, know anything nice enough to out the one who's taught mo ing I know." he knows a great deal, to say too, as evidenced by his cord made in the Medical last semester. PETERSBURG-It is rumored le Washington Senators have to trade Muddy Ruel and Stuf- Wart for the veteran St. Louis ' catcher, Wally Schang. OMINGTON-Coach Pat Page of a has been pushing work on his d wall for the coming gridiron IM BEAyH, Fla.-Paul Heston ed the first professional tennis ment ever held in this country. Winter "Wahoo' Snin Crawford Former Tiger star is now coaching the University of Southern California baseball team. He is shown instruct- ing the players in batting. Crawford was once a co-star of Ty Cobb. He excelled as a slugger and fielder, he and Cobb making up 'one of the best outfield combinations ever seen in baseball when they play- ed on the Detroit team. Stuffy McInnis, new manager of the; cannot be ranked as stars. philadelphia Nationals who will make his debut as a big league manager! this season, is working with a squad which includes only two real stars inI preparation for the* opening of the big league season on April 12. F The only men on the Philadelphia squad besides Stuffy are Harold Carl- son, pitcher, and Jimmy Wilson, catcher. Old Cy Williams would have ranked with these two a season or two ago but he has passed the peak of his ability.. McInnis has two capable outfield- ers in Mokan and Leach. but they ,.,....,., w., _ wi _.,.. .,uH _ _ i. trades took two brilliant players, Henlifle, catchr, and Harper, outfield- er, from the Philadelphia team. In return the management received' Thompson, a . second baseman who shows promise, and two veteran pitch- ers, Jack Scott and Alex Ferguson. Friberg is a good infielder, but a weak hitter, and Attreau, a first baseman, looks like a coming star. - McInnis' greatest task seems to be that of developing a capable pitch- ing staff, as the present corps lacks experienced hurlers with the excep- tion ot-Carlson, Scott, and Ferguson. 'I Save! Save! Save! ED. V. PRICE,& CO, Tailored to Oider COLLEGE CLOTHES.' Hundreds of the wanted fabrics for College Clothes will be found in our line. FEATURE VALUES, $37.50 and $48.50 F. W. GROSS, 309 S MAI: 'iiIIINI|111111II11111111111111111111111111111111111i11111 I,1iiI1111Rllllllllilli Save Time, Money and Energy by Eating at the ANN ARBOR RESTAURANT 215 South Main St. '4 d DAN 's DEN 1l././". O.I .O.AiY. '"./"J.PJ'i./J".d Our New Menu, Features Three Things: Economical breakfast service. Sandwiches of every description. Highest quality regular meals. 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