THE MICHIGAN DAITY ,: TEAMS TO, MEET RIVALS ON FOREIGN Golf And Tennis Teams Play _ig Ten Matches AER LINKSMEN TIir THOUSANDS GATHERFORFTY-FWTH ANNUAL 1lIINETMEN MEET STRONG FIELDS BASEBALL SQUAD WILL MEE N ORTWSEM' INVAD1BRTON HILLSI Wiseonsin With One Of Best Sqiuaks In West Will Try To Stop Wolverine Drive MICHITGAN IS FAVORED Wisconsin's crack golf squad, one of the best in the middle west, will come to Ann Arbor today to match strokes with Michigan's Varsity, at 9:30 o'clock this morning on the tricky Barton Hills course. The Wolverines, with fifteen con- secutive. dual meets safety tucked under their belts, are the slight favorites to win, although Wisocn- sin will present a stronger front than any other team the Wolves have met yet this season. The singles matches which will count twelve points, are scheduled to be played in the morning, while the foursomes, counting six points, will get unde- way in the afternoon. Admission Is Free In the hopesnof attracting a good iized gallery no admission will be charged foil the matches. Thus far this season the crowds have not come up to expectations but in view of -the fine weather and the closely matched strength of the competing teams the gallery should be larger than usual. C. Hunter Sheldon, one of the ranking players in Big Ten golfing circles, and captain of the Badger team, will play number one. Stew- art and Hagan will fill positions two and three respectively, while either Stringfellow or Furst will take care of the fourth position. Michigan's lineup, with the ex- ception of the fourth man, will be the same as it has been in former matches. Bergelin, Ward, and Iew- is having their starting positions Scinched. Either Art Ahlstromuor Frank Royston will fill the fourth position. Ahlstrom has had a lit- tle more dual experience than Royston, but the latter has been coming alng well in his recent matches and should star if given the chance. JOYCE WETHERED TAKES BRITISH WOMAN'S TITLE (1y Associated Press) ST. ANDREWS, Fife, Scotland, May 17.--Joyce Wethered won the British women's championship for the fourth time today when she eliminated Glenna Collett by 3 and 1 in final round. Miss Collett, first AmericanI woman to reach the finals of the event in the 36 years of competi- tion, succumbed on the thirty- fifth green after one of the hardest fought matches ever played for the title. She played good golf, but no woman golfer in the world could have beaten Joyce Wethered today. Making her third attempt to annex the crown, Glenna reeled off the first nine holes of the morn- ing round in 34, two strokes under par, to become five up. But from then on Miss Wethered came to the fore to overcome an apparently in- possible disadvantage. KENTUCKY DERBY SCHEDULED THIS AFTERNOON --wimdc s nave np . tloi; Defeatin Strong. Teams TWuF -~ Am'E KUSeason Illini, Playing On Own Courts, ASBEC SLATER TO HURL 'WilI P ent bangwero tIS Kentucky's fifty-fifth a n n u a l Derby, classic of the American turf season, which will be held at, Churchill Downs this afternoon, continued to draw thousands to the site of the historic track. Attendance records, which in past years have been high, will probablyj go by the boards. For the past sev-C eral days race fans have pouredE into Louisville. Just about all means of available transportation have been used. Arrangements have been made for the landing of air- planes, while river boats and other' craft' are already tied up at the Louisville wharf, with the passen- gers living aboard. . Trains will carry the great bulk of the fans, however. Chicago, rep- resented by Mrs. John D. Hertz's Reigh Count in the derby last year and which came through to win' from a field of 20 starters in a sea, of ankle deep mud, will send the largest racing delegation in its his- tory. Twenty-five special trains have been chartered, while thou- sands will travel by air and auto- mobile. New York, too, will send its usual crowd of race enthusiasts. Special trains will also be run from INDIANA NINE TO MEET MINNESOTA TEAM TODAY Two Big Ten baseball games, only one of which should have much effect on the outcome of the Con- ference race, will be played this afternoon. Michigan's undefeated Conference champions meet North- western in a return game at Evans- ton, while Indiana's third placej outfit tackles the cellar occupants, Minnesota. Indiana has shown flashes ofI form during the early part of the season but has succumbed to the attacks of the Wisconsin and Chi- cago nines. The Chicago game wasr only a five Inning battle that wasI halted because of rain. The Hoosiers have displayed a powerful batting] attack, but lack any exceptional pitchers. Another Conference team, Illi- nois, will go outside the Big Ten realm to lock horns with Notre Dame. Pittsburgh, Detroit and Milwaukee. Ray Beauty for the event. In 1921 Although the clash of many and 1926 his horses finished in that Derby eligibles in trial runs order, but Col. Bradley's chances of throughout the week has excited repeating are against him. the greatest comment, Blue Lark- Clyde Van Dusen, wearing the spur, the Bradley color-bearer and. colors of H. P. Gardner, is second pride of the blue grass, looms as choice, a 4 to 1 shot. Ever since the the favorite of a possible field of conditioning grind was started, 20 starters. The Idle Hour farin Clyde Van Dusen has been running entry, famous son of Black S ' the trials in fast time. will face the barrier a 2 to 1 fa- Although Blue Larkspur and Clyde vorite. Van Dusen have been given the The prospects for fair weather edge, at least four others have been are problematical. The possibility listed as possible winners. F. M. of a muddy track will make it a Grabner's Windy City, Hal Price fine day fo tthe mud runners, al- Headley's Paraphrase, Martin Finn's though the time will not be so fast. Port Harlem and Chaffee Earl's Rain or shine, however, the sox Naishapur, all have been running called experts predict a -horse the trials in near-record time. Opposition WOLVES ARE UNDEFEATED d it fl n i' O 9 b t O 1 1? b t y t t . I race." Col. Edward R. Bradley, who has twice seen his horses finish one- two in the Derby, will also saddle RESERVES TO IIPPOSE Naishapur was the winner of the 'Tiajuana Derby and placed second in the Coffroth Handicap. The classic, should 20 starters face the bairrier, will be worth $64,000, with $54,000 going to the winner. FIFTEEN SCHOOLS ENTER iM S. C..TRACK CARNIVAL fOne of the most exceptional (11Y Associtles,,u) freshmen tennis squads to appear LAS'T LANSING, May 17.--Ac on the courts since 1925 will op- bulgy entry list of high class tal- pose the Varsity Reserves in a ent assembled here today in thet matched tournament today ac- preliminaries of the fourteenth an-1 cording to Coach Ray Courtright, nual Michigan intercollegiate track< Varsity tennis coach. and field meet. Finals will be runr It is safe to say that the year- off tomorrow afternoon. lings will show the Reserves some Fifteen colleges were represent-< fast net work and will undoubtedly ed by upward of 175 athletes as be a tough aggregation to beat, in the preliminaries got under way. view of the fact that the squad ?Two institutions competed for the is composed of such excellent play- first time-General Motors Tech.9 ers as Reindel, Brace, and Ryan. of "Flint and Detroit university- This trio has won various section- and three others returned to the al tournaments in the past and one competition after recurrent ab- of them, Brace, was one time Illi- sences-Oliver, Adrian and Alma. nois state champion in the sin- 1Michigan State, Western State gles. I Teachers, Michigan State Normal, At present the positions on the Central State Teachers, Albion, De- freshman squad are in the follow- troit City college, Kalamazoo col-' ing order: Ryan, R. Clark, B. Clark, lege, Hillsdale, Hope and Grand Reindel, Brace, and Pendell. The Rapids Junior college were other first five men have gone undefeat- entries. ed in match play this year, so it is easy to prophesy a safe victory for the yearlings and especially so with such stellar players as the above composing the squad. With all hopes for a Conference dual meet championship hanging in the balance, Michigan's unde- feated Varsity tennis team will match strokes with a powerful Il- linois combination this afternoon j on the Illini courts. A decisive winner over a disor- i ganized Michigan team last year by a 7-2 count, the Suckers will at- tempt to make it three straiight over the Maize and Blue. Back in 1926 the Indians journed to Ann Arbor to win over the Wolverines by a 4-2 score, and 'carry home the Conference championship. Two years ago an unbeaten Michigan team was unwilling to risk their title hopes on sloppy Illinois courts at Champaign and as a result the match was called off. Has Lost To Chicago This year's Illinois net contin- gent, though a sufferer of a seri- ous loss by the passing of their ranking stars of other years in George O'Connell and Gordon Braudt, has stamped itself as one of the strongest combinations 'in m id western intercollegiate circles. The Orange netmen have only dropped one match this year. Chi- caos fast moving team upset the Indians by the closest of scores, 5-4. With the count tied at 4 all in matches the Illinois third dou- bles team -was within a point of wining the deciding encounter seven times only to losenthe set and match to the Chicagoans. The Wolverine singles assign- ments will undoubtedly undergo a shift from the lineup presented against the Minnesota team last Saturday. While the first four singles berths will probably remain (Continued on Page Seven) In the second game of .their trip this week end the Wolverine baseball team will meet the er- ratic Northwestern nine which has earned for itself the formidable title of "giant killer." Today's game will give the Purple team an opportunity to kill the biggest giant in the Western Conference and a victory over the Maize and Blue will brand them with this title beyond all doubt and credit them with a most weird season. Three other teams have been toppled from one hundred per cent averages by the Wildcats so far this season and in each case the con- test began a slump for the van- guished. Illinois was touted at the beginning of the season to be one of the chief if not the chief, con- tender against Michigan for the title, but an early game with Northwestern started the Illini on a slide that has landed them in fifth place at present. Wildcats Defeated Purdue Purdue also hung in at the top of the percentage column until they were defeated by the Wildcats' and then fell subject to a seriesof beatings which has placed them eighth in BighTen standings.tWis- consin was slow beginning, then baseball season in the Conferenee but gave promise of an eXcellbrt* season by winning two in a -row. However the reputation of the" Wildcats as "giant killers" was strengthened by defeating the. Badgers decisively in Wisconsin's- third Big Ten game. Between their manslaughted epi- sodes, the Northwestern nIne ap peared considerable less formifd- able and lost four games to corm- paratively weak 'teams. Four vie- tories and four defeats give* the Wildcats a .500 average and a tie for sixth place with Chicago. 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