PAGE SIX TriP MICC=fAMFDAILY . L 1 AJ-A *YC%[\ * SSl . St).j *t .J..J'-1AA 1...£ RATURDAY. JITNP,, 4. 192" r SA'PURDAY. J1TNI~ t 1927 --- urnAR__ 1 RAO, yY \ I O[S TO MEETACOSTE AND BOROTRA WILL MEET AMERICAN PAIR IN DOUBLES MATCH BUCKEYE NINElTODAY BRITISH TO MAKE B~fl-PIRATE INFIELDER CUT r I MAJOR LEAGUES S- 7 Tbird Place Berth Is Aim Of 3ieigan Nine In Final Conference Ga.me Of Seas on DON MILLER WILL PITCH ' With at least a tie for third place in the 1927 standings assured them, the Wolverines will play Ohio State this afternoon at Ferry field in the final ball game of the year. Michigan has hopes of defeating the Buckeyes for the second time this season, thus gaining third position undisputed. The game will not start until 4:05 o'clock on account of examinations. Illinois and Iowa are deadlocked for first honors this season, having won seven of their 10 gamnes for a per- centage of .700. A victory for the Wol- verines will cinch the berth immediate- ly below the - two leaders with one more defeat than the Hawkeyes and the Illini have sustained and one more win. Michigan played the Buckeyes on May 9 at Columbus and handed them a 7-3 defeat. Fred Asbeck, startingt his first Big Ten contest, pitched a masterful game and held the Ohio, team to six hits while his mates ham- mered Klink and Blanchard for 12 safeties. Although the Ohio team has failed to live 'up to the championship pre- dictions made by sport critics early in the season it includes a trio of ex- cellent players in Ames, Karow, andI Tarbert and may be connted on to givej the Wolverines a stiff battle this after- noon. 1 i I ,.EAU.63OTRA EN AOT French tennis stars, who will meet Tilden and Francis T. Hunter, Ame-I rica's invadingi doubles team, in the quarter finals of the French hard-court tennis championship today. La Coste also won his way to the finals of theI singles tournament by defeating Spence ofSouth Africa, 6-1, 6-3, 6-2,a through his superior steadiness. Tilden, by virtue of his defeat of Henri Cochet'in the seni-finals 9-7,6-3, 6-2, will oppose La Coste in the final s. Cochet elintinated Tilden from the' United States singles championship last fall, so Tilden's three set victory over his former conqueror shows how much he has improved since his dis- astrous 1926 season. La Coste, the winner of the United States singles championship last season, was playing well during his semi-final match, and is expected to give a good account of himself against Tilden in the finals on. Sunday. THE FRESHMEN HADA MEET, FOR OPEN GOLF TITLE Ted Ray, Former United States 'open Champion, Will Attempt Second Conquest ENGLAND ENTERS 10 MENE (By Associated Press) I NEW YORK, June 3.-Ame ca's supremacy on the links, which reached its crest last year in sweeping British victories by Bobby Jones and Jess Sweetser, will be subjected to its nrtost threatening challenge since 1920 inI the American open championship at Oakmont, Pa., June 14, 15, and 16. Ten British Players Entered Ten places in the starting field al- 3 ready have been set aside for a band of British professionals whose invasion has the double objective of successful-I ly defending the Ryder team trophy against an American team and of lift- ing the most coveted of American links titles. One invader, the power- ful hitting veteran, Ted Ray, is a former AnZerican open champion. Of the many scattering attempts which foreign stars have made to penetrate the home defenses, only two have been successful. Ray's triumph; seven years ago was the last, terminat- ing a twenty year stretch during which no European player was able to break through. The other victory in 1900 was posted by the great English stylist, Harry Vardon.- Vardon Won Title The success of British forces in these two campaigns, however, was pronounced, for on both occasions compatriots finished in the runner-up positions. J. H. Taylor of England was second to Vardon in 1900, twol strokes behind the winner's score of 313, while Vardon tied three American players for gecond place in 1920. There was one other notable British invasion in 1913 by Vardon and Ray, when the two famous overseas players 1 finished in a tie with Francis Ouimet, then a young Boston amateur, for first! place. To the surprise of critics and a large gallery, Ouimet then proceed- ed to win the subsequent play-off,I shooting 72 to 77 for Vardon and 78 for Ray. MADISON.-Wisconsin athletic of-C ficials announce that the Washington-; Badger crew race has been postponed juntil June 17. E "v n+ a - -a /Ad AsO' . . V A lo ... Hurling Duel Expected Today's game, like the Wisconsin contest on Monday, is expected to re- solve itself into a pitching' duel, with Don Miller performing for the Wol- verines and Red Ames, son of the. former New York Giant star, in the box for the invaders. Ames, Ohio's sophomore star, has ; proved one of the most effective moundsinen in the Big Ten this sea- Aon, having hurled in most of the games won by the Buckeyes. One of, his feature performances of the year was the Illinois contest, in which he held the Conference leaders to two hits. Curiously enough, the Buckeye team has never. faced Don Miller, Coach Fisher's veteran pitcher. In the con- test at Columbus last year Walter worked for the Wolverines and in the return game he started but was re- lieved by Jablonowski, Miller being unable to pitch this game because of illness. Four Play Last Game Four members of the Michigan squad will play their last Big Ten' game this afternoon. Capt. Bill Puckel- wartz, Red Davis, and Don Miller are the regulars appearing against a Con-, ference opponent fbr the last time,1 while Ruetz, a reserve pitcher, is thef fourth player to end his Big Ten ca-, reer. Ohio State will probably line up with Widdlefield at first: Karow at second, Riehl a short, Tressel at third; Tarbert, Sutton, and Sope in the outfield; Mackey behind the plate and Ames in the box with Blanchard and { Klink ready for relief duty.' This afternoon's contest will also be the last Conference engagement for five Ohio players, Captain Mackey, catcher, Karow and Tressel, infielders, Tarbert, outfielder,rand Blanchard, pitcher, are the third year men. MADISON.-Rollie Barnum has been' awarded his ninth major sport letter. George Grantham Second baseman of the Pittsburi Pirates, who hit a home run in ye terday's game with the Phillies. Tw of his teammates, Wright and Wane also knocked out circuit blows, to giv the Pirates an 11-1 victory. Aldridg held the Phillies to four hits. LAY SOD FOR NEW STADIU Work was begun yesterday on la ing down the sod for the football pla ing field in the new stadium now und construction west of Ferry fie] which is to be completed about Octob 1. Sod is being laid only on the playi field at present. MANAGER APPOINTED William Thielman, '29, has been appointed minor sports manager for the next school year according to an announce- ment received yesterday. The work entails charge of the golf team and is also connected with hockey, tennis, swimming, and wrestling squads. Harold Marks, '29, Gerald Har- rington, '29, Sidney Steensma, '29, antd .l..McCarthy, '28A,-..ere ( appointed as assistants. Ninety-three points is a whole lot of points for one team to score in a Con- ference Track meet. It would take a team-composed of Hubbards, Brook- inses, Johnsons, Osbornes, McGinnises and then some to hang up such a performance-but that is what the Iowa freshmen did in the recent Bigj Ten telegraphic meet sponsored byj the Big Ten Weekly.t While we have no qu arrel with Iowa just because they have an all-star crew of - trackmen, we would like to make a suggestion to the trackmen of the other schools. Either they will have to get new watches and tapes or new timers, or lperhays the telegraph operators are gumming the works for the other schools in the Big Ten. Again, 93 points is a lot, especially when it happens to be more than the totals of the two runner-up teams added together. Ohio didn't do badly with 40 1-2 to nose out the strong I2- k lini by a point. Wisconsin had a good freshman team but only got fourth and 27 1-2. But something must be done about Charlie Hoyt and his watchI -he only managed to get 14 1-2 ' points for the young Wolverines. And, though Charlie is not saying iiiuch and the teamii wasn't so very hot, still there were several good men on the squad. I ! As for the Michigan yearlings, thereI is Chapman, a sprinter and broad jumper. He will probably specialize in the latter event although he did not do much in that this season. His mark in the meet was 21 feet 10 inches, butI he should develop into a 23 foot man next year.j Then there is Hayden, a manI who can run any distance from 880 yards to two miles and do a credit- able job of it. He can do right at 2 minutes for the half and about 4::35 in the mile. He ran the two mile indoors in 10:03. A good crop of quarter iilers came out of the squad, as is shown by the 3:25.5 performance to win the mile relay. Dale and Dalton Seymour and Reed were the three best men on the squad as the Seymours both placed indoors while Reed and Dale gained (Continued on Page Seven) T American Lea gu >k R ttDetroit ......... 000 000 300--3 tNew York ......010 000 000-1 Cleveland .......300 000 000-3 Philadelphia ....000 000 100-1 Chicago ........ 002 300 000-5 Boston ,.........010 000 000-1 St. Louis .......030 000 500-8 Washington .....000 000 130-4 National League R Boston.........000 401 000-5 Chicago .........011 000 020-4 New York ......300 002 010-6 Cincinnati......000 000 000-0 Philadelphia ....000 000 001-1 - Pittsburgh .....000 310 25x-11 Brooklyn-St. Louis-Wet grou Home Runs American League Tavener, Detroit; Simmons,I delphia; Gehrig, New York; Th w Chicago. er, National League ve Grantham; Waner, Wright, ge burgh. gen M qc 1AL-' y- ter - , d, ter The New Lightweig your insp GUY Exclusive - - Designe WHITE H01 I BROADWYAT 40T ST .MERi~OPOLT~ AORA HoUSE + 84BROADW PHIIADELPHI 12 TO the St of the This is the la Daily and I and all for y 1926-27. I h vacation to the who are gradu IIi their new end will return to t want to have1 in the past. I and a safe retu The Sho 116 E I'1 11 7 8 14 13 9 H 12 14 10 3 4 15 IH E R8 0 10 '1 0O 0 0 1 1 0 E 1 2 1 0 1 PRINCETON.-John VanRyn wa Pitts- elected captain of the 1928 tenni team. until June. _.1., nds. Phila- omas, CHICAGO [TDRW MANY STAR ATHLETES Collegiate track athletes throughout the country who have starred in inter- collegiate meets are entered in the an- nual track and field championships of the National Collegiate A. A. to be held in Chicago, at Soldiers' field, June 10 and 11. The committee is hopeful of getting Sabin Carr of Yale, the sensational pole vaulter who recently broke the world's record with a vault of 14 feet, to compete. Director Stagg, himself one of the greatest athletes Vale has ever produced, intends to send Carr a personal letter requesting his pres- ence, Some of the institutions that have already sent in their entries are Bay- lor, Southern Methodist, Kalamazoo' college, Drake, Texas A. and M., Pitts- burgh, Butler, University of Washing- ton, University of Michigan, Iowa State, Marquette, Grinnell, Hillsdale, Indiana, Duke, Albion, Detroit City college, Kansas State, Montana, South Dakota, and Texas. x .... 'I i r i 1 SOME BETTER VALUES IN SUITS OF FINE FABRICS AND NEW STYLES ' $"".50 $270 FRED W. GROSS 309 South Main ~ll./,J.A./., °,0.X11,4 ././1././«I./1ll./l../0 4 FARMERS AND MECHANICS BANK -- I 1 I Don ' iss'this Your Last Chance to Buy Any Suit in the Store for Every Suit is Specially Designed by Del Prete and Tailored by Adler. - _ ,.' udents University:- st issue of The Michigan want to thank you one our loyal patronage for hope you will enjoy your fullest extent. 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