THE MICHIGAN DAILY A N HALTS 7"MICHIGAN-ILLINI BASEBALL GAA E IBLE-HE&OER TO BE VED AT CHAMPAIGN! ( MICHlIGAAN BATTING AVERAGES 1 onenjent Of Yesterday's Will Necessitate Double Bill on Way 12 GaMe, AB Morse............10 Oosteribaan .......13 McAffee .......... 9 Lange... ........9 Corriden .........12 Weintraub ........11 McCoy..... ......15 Nebelung.........12 Slagle.............3 Asbeck...........5 Loos .............13 Squier... 1 5 6 4 4 5 4 5 4 1 1 2 0 H R 4 1 2 3 5 4 6 0 0 1 1 PCT. .500 .462 .444 .444 .417 .364 .333 .333 .333 .200 .1.54 .000 It Seems There Were Two Irishnen---Gene And Tom VOGEL MAKES PROTEST Rain, one of the elenents against which coaches cannot guard, put an end to Michigan's unusually active first week of Big Ten competition yesterday when a steady rain set in in the morning, causing the postpon- meat of the Illinois contest and thus, necessitating a double header May 12 at Champaign. This will compel the Wolverines to play three hard games in two days, as they are scheduled to meet Iowa in ar return engagem-ent May 11 at Iowa City. With three games in two days a- gainst teams of the caliber of the Hawkeyes and the Indians, co-holders of the 1927 title and generally recog- nized as two of the strongest outfits -in the Big Ten, Coach Fisher realized .the difficult assignment that must be fulfilled and intends to point the team for this series. Must Uncover Anotiher Hurler His major task appears to be the uncovering of another pitcher of suf- ficient ability to stay the Indian bats, as Asbeck will probably be sent to the mound against the Hawks, leaving only McAfee available for duty at Champaign. The Michigan coach has a number of promising twirlers, but they tack experience under Conference fire. Gawne, Holtzman, Martin, Moffett, Nebelung, and Oosterbaan represent .the outstanding possibilities, although Gavne is the only one of the group who has evei, faced a Big Ten oppon- ent. Oosterbaan May Pitch There seems to be strong possibility that Bennie Oosterbaan, who starred against Clemson in the role of a re- lief pitcher, may solve Fisher's prob- lem. The big, first baseman has all of the asseth of a capable pitcher, except experience. He has plenty of speed, fair .control, and is developing a curve ball. le came near making his Ferry field debut in the capacity of relief pitcher in Friday's game after Squier had bat- (Continued on Page Seven) 'Fhis Page Edited ALEX A. B90hNOWKI '2$) SThese include Big Ten games to date only. WOLVEFRINElS TO HAVE With favorable ground(l and weather conditions, there is little doubt that Michigan will have a strong tennis squad this year-what with four of the best five men on last year's cham- pionship team back and some half dozen others pressing the veterans for places all the way. Try-out matches have been playel in spite of the courts which are in the worst condition in years, making real practice a hazard. With the Con- ference season to open here Saturday with Northwestern the squad is in need of match play which it hopes to get with the Detroit tennis club Wednesday. Further matches will be played to- morrow in an attempt to make an in- telligent selection for the Detroit matches from the large number of candidates on hand while the Detroit competition should aid greatly in de- termining the men to oppose North- western. Of the veterans- Captain Barton, Schafer, Moore, Algyer- Barton and Schafer are going especially well while Moore seems to be slumping a bit though it is merely practice work. Coach Hutchins is faced with a problem in making up a team with Heaney, Bacon and Elliot showing up in great shape and mighty close to displacing a few of the letter men. All these are new to the Varsity squad, the latter wining numerals last spring while the othe,4 two could not play last season because of the one-year ruling. In addition to these, Graham, Kemp- ner, and Brody are just a bit back along with Farbman, Lamoree, Felix, Marshall and a few others. Graham led the freshman last spring and has a fine record in practice matches. SPORTS CAlLENARI 'roiorrdw Tennis-First round of the inter- fraternity tennis tournament. Tuesday Baseball-Michigan at Indiana. , Friday Baseball-Syracuse, here. Saturday Baseball-Syracuse, here. Tennis-Northwestern, here. Track-Drake Relays, Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa. YE[ARHLING BALL -SQUAD, NUMBERS MANY MEN Following Coach Jack Blotf's. call for freshman baseball candidates, 68 players have been engaging in pre- liminary practice sessions in batting and fielding at Ferry field during the past week. The latest additions to the squad consist mainly of infield- ers and outfielders as the battery candidates have been having regular workouts ever since the week preced ing the Spring vacation. With a view of getting a line on the most promising players, Coach Blott put the men through their paces yes-I terday in Yost Field house, and this1 drill will be continued tomorrow outI of doors, the weather permitting. Ap- proximately twenty of the yearlings will be dropped from the squad on Tuesday in the first cut of the season, thus enabling the coach to develop - ' -_ 7 s \ _- -___ ENEYN. - N 10METER VICTUOY Sprinter IVI1i Seek To W in I00-lePtAr Pasli For Second Time In The Corning Olympics ACHIEVED ONCE BEFORE (By Associated Press) NEXW YORK, April 21. - Charley Paddock will attempt this year to ac- complish a feat only one other athlete has ever achieved-win the classic Olympic 100-meter dash for the sec- ond time. More than a score of years ago, Ar- chie Hahn, former University of Michigan track star, and no relation to the present distance iuning Lloyd Hahn, registered a dual triumph but ouly two years separated his victor- ies at St;. ILouis in 1904 and Athens in 1906. It was eight years ago that Pad- dock leaped into the tape first at Antwerp, a foot ahead of his fellow Californian, Morris Kirksey. Four years later the stocky blond flier ran no better than fifth in the 100 meters 1at Paris but he came within an eye- lash of beating Jackson Scholz for, the 200-meter championship in a hair- raising duel on the Colombes track. Now Paddock is getting in trim for hiis third Olympic venture, along with hIis old rival Scholz. The life of nm'ost sprint aces is short but age has dealt kindly with these two veterans, both counted upon heavily in plans de- signed to bring back to the Unit ed States the 100-meter laurels that now belong to England. Sprinting supremacy is one of the things Uncle Sam has cherished most when it comes to Olympic competi- tion. It was a shock, therefore, to Yankee pride when the rangy Harold Abrahasm, Cambridge University star, galloped in ahead of Scholz, Bow- man, Paddock and Murchison at Par- is four years ago. Now out of competition, Abrahams will be at Amsterdam only in the role of "non-playing" captain of the British track team, but America will do well to be prepared for some un- expected threat. By F. G. VOS UIGi1 (Feature Service Sports Editor) 1 NEW YORK---This is a story of two Irishmen-Gene and T'om- and of how they were dropped into oppo- site corners of the world, followed the natural fighting propensities of the Irish and are now to find themselves in opposite corners of a ring with the' world's heavyweight boxing champ- ionship at stake., Already te forthcoming title bout between the Champion Gene Tunney and Challenger Tom Heeney is being ballyhooed as a great "international" battle. Actually it boils down to a good old Irish shindig. Both Gene and Tom were born of Irish parents not long removed from the Ould Sod. The difference is that somewhere. near the toime the Heeney's headed south and east for New Zealand, be- jabers, the Tunneys came, to New York where the father worked as a stevedore and where the boy who would be king was born. While Tunney was jabbing his way upward toward his championship, the New Zealand Irishman was subjugat- ing Australia and vicinity, Africa and Ireland. In search of cash enough to' buy himself an overcoat, history has it, he turned to America. When HJeeney appeared on the New York pugilistic scene 14 months ago he and Tunney were the only Irish- men among Tex Rickard's hand-pick- ed heavyweights, outside of Jimmy Maloney, the glass-chinned South Bostonian. When the dust cleared a- way Heeney was still standing up like a rock above the Lithuanian Sharkey, the Austro-Hungarian Risko, the French-Canadian Jack Delaney, and the Spanish Basque Paulino, so it happens that the Irishman from "down under" and the Irishman from Greenwich Village are to meet in the big shot. All the Irish fight, but they don't all fight alike. Witness John L. Sulli- van, the burly bruiser, and James J. I Corbett, the master of science. Now history repeats itself and here we have Thomas Heeney, the burly l bruiser, and James J. Tunney, the master of science. In that other all- Irish fight years ago at New Orleans the boxer won but the fighter had seen his best days and was out of condit: over-c ion, weakened by inactivity and onfidence. Now' it's the boxer who's up against the handicap of ring, rustiness. Heeney and Tunney don't talk alike any more than they fight alike. Tom' has picked up the "Blime's" and the "Haitches" of the "H-English" with whom he has been thrown most of his life, while Tunney, ruling the heavyweight roost in a part of the world where boxing is patronized by the "best people" along with the more delicate arts of literature and the drama, has come to run m-ore to words of nlany syllables. But toss the pair o'thim in a ring and you'll see quick enough they're a couple of Irish, and it doesn't take very close scrutiny of their physiog- nomies either, to see that they carry around part of the map of the old isle: the most potential material. In paration for practice encounters the Varsity, a tentative line-up probably be picked the first of week. prie with will next ANN ARBOR RESIDENT IS WINNER OF OXFORD AWARD George Patterson Faust, Ann Arbor, won his "full blue" by capturing the pole vault event in the recent Ox- forA-Cambridge dual meet. Faust, a graduate of Princeton, is now attend- ing Oxford. He is the son of Lt. Com. Wm. H. 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