THE MICHPGAN~ DATLY sity Baseb all ee to Play Western State Toda x 64" 12[, astman in g d sr at.Mve in O ut aeup. o~eaDefetedWestern. State Earl ir iSeason, 4-2; Fans Ep'Ey Win Today. PROBABLE -LINEUPS cl&n Western tate perko, 3b Blpckney, rf aendle, if Decker, cf rimpkns, ef Denner, 3b idson, 1b Thomas, c ffley, c Cooper, 1b nels, 2b Wood, 2b ody, rf McKay, if ,,ht, ss- Bailey, s rKay, p Neiginfind, p Back home again after a fifty- ty break against Iowa and fllin- ,"Michigan's baseball team will ee.Western State Normal College Kalamazoo at 4:05 o'clock this ternoon. in a retulri game- Second Game Against Kazoo. airy, this season the' Wolveries rneyed to Kalamazoo where they frted the Teachers by a 4-2 re, behind the pitching of Mc- . and Tompkins. McKay show- ,-partic'ulaXly well against the iMnal ,team, and as a result of SWork irn that game will get an- I chance to down Western ite again this afternoon. Vhile Western State will be look- at th left handed slants of fty McKay,; the Wolverines also I be forced to bat against the tside deliveries of the visiting ; .NYeiginfiind, who turned in a Ullant performance against them the first game between the two bs. At that time Neiginfind .d them to seven hits, four of ich were bunched in the second l ing to give the Maize and Blue ough runs to win the game. Mc- y and Tompkins gave up 10 e blows between them, both of e Western State markers coming alnst Tompkins in the ninth. Poor Batting Benches Eas man-. xnocher change in the Michigan eup will see Moody, substitute st baseman, in. right field in ee of harry Eastman. Moody s been k atting well in the prac- e sessid1, and ,s he has no nce of displacing the heavy ting Hudson at the initial cush-~ , e will be put into right field, ere his batting may be of some (Continued on Page 7) GGER, DRIVER MEET IN DETROIT mber, Golf, and Swat King Discuss Trade of Weapons.' B ENTON HARBtORHFEMETB pls T0091,1Os, SPO RT bALENDAR Today Baseball Western State.... .hereI Ol BUILoD HU pEs toMake told nAi ' Hki lotiest N-k Baseb all ScorEs 91lAMERICAN LEAG'UEI[ 20 HNEiE . All-Campus Golf Qualificatien, Conpleted, Playoffs Start Today Over Course. Next on the spring calendar of sports events sponsored by the In- tramural Department will be the Rifle Shooting number, an annual event which will take place this afternoon at the R. 0. T. C. build- ing on the range there between the hours of 3:30 ml, 530. Trials Scheduled Today. Contestan~ts mray come in during those hours and take their trials. Each individual will take two sight- ing shots and ten shots for record, shorting at a distance of 50 feet from the prone position. The guns, amunition, targets, and officials will be furnished by the R o.T. C. Tom~torrowj Ba-eball Ypsilanti ........there' Thursday Golf Chicago.........there Friday Track Big Ten Meet... Evanston Saturday Track Big Ten Meet... Evanston Cult 1'Illinois............there mis Illinos...there Laseball Michigan State .. .there Veteran Derby Men Hail Twenty Grand as Greatest Horse N. York . . .105 100 05 20 19 2 ]Detroit ... .002. 001 023 3 12 5I txol n"1Tilnr.7~~n-c.Ln. vcu i UI iJLAZ I IUAV~b IV p eii , dns U tuDicmey, J rgens; Her- American League Winners ring, Whitehill, Wyatt, Koenig, and of Chicago Sox. Schang. May 18.-()-In his Boston. ....001 ,04 002.8 14 1 CHI1CAGO,..a $-A'-nhsnchic ago, . 001. O00 206 9J417 seventy-third year and not in the Licenbe..t 1ur0 a,, and Rue l; best of health, Charles A. Comis- Lyonsnbce.. ad ae. key, "the old Roman," is still striv- yons, McKa, and Tate. ing to weld together another Amer- ican league championship conten- hCleve......021000 20 17 12 1 der for Chicago. Walberg, Grove. and Cochrane; After the world series scandal of '.Miller, Hudlin and Sewell. 1919, which caused him to wreck I_ Turfmen from all parts of the country were calling Twenty Grand, Derby winner, "the wonder horse, unit. of the age." Veteran horsemen were. A great deal of interest was mani- comparing the Whitney colt to thej fested last year during the tourna- gret Man o' War, and many claim- ment and it is expected that a , ea ad ,Manybein lager number will be on hand for ed that had Man o' War been in the event today. The All-Campus his prime and in the Kentucky winner last year was P. J. Ferring Derby he would have been beaten whO won with a score of 93, H. J. by Twenty Grand. Williams with 92 being the runner- Other followers of racing were .of up. The usual awards are offered the conviction that this year's win-I by the Intramural Department, ner could run circles around Gal- being a trophy for. the winner and I ant Fox on the best day that the a gold medal for the runner-up. Fox ever saw. Some stated that All-Campus Golf Started. Twenty Grand woludn't be beaten Qualification matches for the All- again. Campus Golf tournament were com- One of turfdom's greatest clock- pleted Sunday from which the ten ers was especially enthusiastic in men with the lowest scores become his praise of Charles. T., Fisher's eligible for the final elimination Sweep All, who ran second in the tourney. Scoring varied all the way Derby. Tommy Oliphant, the clock- from 78 to 103, but competition pro- er, said as he timed Sweep All at James W. Orwig, Wi o has been signed as head coach football and basketball in Benton. Harbor high school next year. Orwig starred for three years on Michigan's Varsity basketball team playing at forward and guard and won his football letter in his Junior year at an end position but was injured in his. last year. He served as football coach of fresh-. man ends last fall. In his new po- sition he will be in charge of all athletics. CIILFTIkMS. TA.KE ELAUIICITY RAcE Only Four Teams in League Are Undefeated in Detroit District Group. DETROIT, May 18. - () - Only fouir teams out of .18 that started play in the Detroit District Golf League two weeks ago are unde- feated. They are Oakland Hills and Western in Group A, Bloomfield Hills in B and Red Run An C. With talentthus comparatively well bal- anced. Oakland Hills gained a .place -with Western at the top of the standings by a double coup yesterday, down- ing Lochmoor, 101/2 to 71/2 in the. morning and in the afternoon giv- ing Country Club its second succes- sive defeat, this time by the score of 10 to 8. In each case a member of the losing side had low score. H. R. Olscn, Lochmoor, shooting a 75 in the morning and Benjamin H. Paddock's 74 in the afternoon being low for both Country Club and Oakland Hills. Western maintained its unde- feated position by nosing out the Detroit Golf Club by a single point in the morning, 91/2 to 81/2, Brook- lands tying Detroit in the after- noon, 9, to 9. Bloomfield Hills, only undefeated aggregation in Class B, was trailing when the first Meadowbookfour- ' n-e reportedabut the Bloomfield's second pair came within, half ,a point of scoring a sweep. The clos- est matches of the day were at Pine Lake, where the home team nosed out Island Country Club in the morning, 91/2 to 81/2 and held Grosse Ile even in the afternoon, tying 9 to 9. a great team, Comiskey's White Sox sagged and sagged into the depths of the league. A year ago, he hired Donie Bush, who had given Pittsburgh a National league title, to manage his club, and since then, has bought and traded in an l effort to fashion a club capable of attracting enough customers to fill the huge White Sox playing park. His latest effort has been to trade Willie Kamm, for whom he paid 11$100,000 in 1922, and who was one of the league's leading third base- men, for Lew Fonseca of the Cleve-. land Indians. Fonseca, who led the American league in batting in 1929, will be used either at second, or third, and his hitting should help the Sox to win games. Early in the season Lu Blue was obtained from t h e St. Louis Browns to play firsts otherwise Fonseca, who has been at first for the Indians, might have been sta- tioned there. Manager Bush predicts that his team will cause all kinds of trou- ble when it gains its full power. Ted Lyons, the ace of the pitching staff, has been out with an injured shoulder, and Smead Jolley, a bats- man of .300-plus caliber has been inactive since undergoing a minor surgical operation. Three hundred and twenty track and field athletes of the Big Ten, comprising one of the best fields in the history of the conference, will finish training this week in preparation for the annual cham- pionships at Dyche stadium in Evanston Friday and Saturday. NATIONAL LEAGUE R H E Pitts........000 010 000 1 5 1 Boston ....000 201 OOx 3 6 1 Brame and Phillips; Brandt and Spohrer. Cm. ........001 000 111 4' Brklyn. ...440 011 40x 14 Eckert, Carrol, Ogden and forth; Thurston and Lopez. St. Louis ..000 000 201. 3 Haines, Stout and Wilson; and O'Ferrell. 12 2 16 1 Suke- 3 6W3 Walker Chicago ...002 200 000 Phila. .....010 000 112 4 5 9 10 2l 0 Barnett, May and Hartnett; Sto- ner, Watt, Benge and Davis. Thinclads to Compete in Meet for Big Ten Championship atiEvaiston Friday. Now that the "I told you sos" are all over and the Michigan Var- sity thinclads crashed .through in their toughest assignmeit of the sjeason by taking over the stroj.ig Illinois team last-Saturday to con- tinue' af unbroken string of vic- tories which began last -winter on the indoor track, they can not be content to rest on their laurels, bright as they may be, for they are scheduled to defend the West- ern Conferenc e championship whichAteve Farrel left as a legacy last spring. Egleston Wins in Upset. The win last Saturday against'a team which is rated as one.of the best in Big Ten track circles, was accomplishe d-in.a brillant fashion, as have previous tests, with the Wolverine stars coming through with the necessary points when the occasion demands. Hawley Egles- ton deserves the credit for the big- gest upset of the meet when he crashed through the high hurdle event to beat Lee Sentman.,.Confr- ence champion, by a yard with Haefele on his heels. Harmon Wolfe -Continued on Page 7) A.t 9 mises to be exciting since the high- est qualifying score was 87, two men making the grade thereby. The Intramural Department was, forced to drop two men from theI tourney due to participation on the Varsity and freshman teams. This resulted in dropping two of the best scores, Thormer's being the lowest. Matches will be played off in the course of the next two weeks and will consist of 18 holes medal play, except for the semi-finals and finals which will be 36. Awards for the# winner and runner-up for thisl sport as. given by the Intramural Department area a trophy cup and gold medal respectively., Qualifying Scores Reported. The following are the ten high men: .Paul J. Ferring, 78; John] Root, 82; L. M. Darrow, .83; George David, 83; Richard Lyons, 83; E. T., Rice, 84; Willian Park, 85; Bert Edgert, 86; Keith Crossman, 87; James Temtple, 87. Just 24 men com- pleted the qualifying matches and the scores graduate slowly up to above 100 from this point. There are two scheduled matches today: 1:00-Temple vs. Edgert; 2:00-David vs. Roots Only one match is carded for tomorrow and the contestants will be Park and Crossman who tee off at 1 o'clock. YESTERDAY'S HOMERS McManus-Tigers Doljack-Tigers Pickering-Red Sox Foxx-Athletics Phillips-Pirates Freder-Herman-Dodgers 2:02 3-5, "Do you realize that Sweep All also broke the Derby record of Old Rosebud?" The Fisher colt's time was four fifths of a second faster than Old Rosebud's mark made in 1914, and he was three lengths behind Twenty Grand. A former jockey said that the old mark withstood thetonslaught for 17 years, but Twenty Grand gave them one they'll be shooting at for a number of years to come. Charlie Kurtsinger, the winning jockey, said that Twenty Grand was by far the fastest horse he had ever ridden. Twenty Grand is a horse of ex- ceptional beauty. He has almost perfectly shaped legs, with sinews of iron, and powerful hindquarters which give him that tremendous driving power. His strides are long, with an easy, graceful motion that makes him seem to fly over the track. Real savinigs on fne CROSLEY AP SF WE SELL WE RENT WE SEiRVICB Tel, 2?812 :MRAD BOSCH HOP 0,5 -E., Williams 1I 1! shoes Ill. The Downtow Store for Michigan Men a DETROIT, May 18. - (IP) - The longest driver in golf sauntered across Navin Field yesterday after- noon, his favorite club in his hand. He stopped at the Yankee dugout to greet the longest hitter in base ball. "Lemme see that," said Babe Ruth getting up from his seat and reaching for the driver. He took the club in his massive hands, tapped it lightly against the rough boards of the dugout and asked Clarence Gamber how much it weighed. "Fifteen ounces," replied the pro- fessional of Forest Lake Country Club. .. "m," said the Babe, "I got one Gamber sat down on the bench and fondled one of the Babe's bats, that weighs at least three times as much. Ruth continued to wiggle the driver, t "I'lltrade yer," said the Babe. Gamber grinned. The Babe carried the golf club to right field, taking practice swings as he went, while Gamber carried the bat. TYPEWRITER REPAIRING All makes of machines.: Our equipment and per- s o n n e 1 are considered among the best in the State. The result of twenty years' careful building. 0. D. MORRILL 31 .South State St. Phone 6615 ', _ r :3 ;.. r . ___ Complete lines of our f atmid u "Big Ten" Oxfords niade of tie finest nipo6r't eAMartin S-cotch grain leathers I' Reduced from L O dilcra SUMMER WORK Under classmen given preference. Mr. J. L. Cobb of Chicago, will interview those inter- ested from_ three to I $4.g5 Spring Sportswear eight Wed., - - "Y T p. m. Tues., Thurs., Michi. Washa le Knickers Lipenis with the Knick-lok tab bottom in plaid white and white with plaids. $3 50 and $375 Wool knickers Tan and gray flannels for the better dressed golfer. All are tailored in the plus-4 fashion. $"50 I gu' yWisel and Attend cOkLETT'S Clearane Sale A large selecton of the cuttrent models in the fohnston Mu h line Redced from fourteen dollars Golf Hose II A fine grade of light weight wool with lisle lining. stock is complete in all the poular colors. $100 Our ipg.95 ! AS HINQTON SHOP You can buyr the best Suit in with 2 pair pants for $33.75 Ann Arbor White Duck Trousers White ducks are always poular for tennis. We are show- ing two styles-20" cuff and sailor bottoms. $200 and $250 "'INX 107 East Liberty Expert Shoe WAG NE R'S All new this season and smartly styled m I 1 1I 111