THE MICHICIAN
DAILY
;.
>ves Meet Indiana oday inFind BigTen
Gam(
iegler and 'eller Will Oppose
Each Other on Mound in
Last.Conference Tilt.-
PrOBAILE LINEUPS
lWichigan 1nbacina
perko, 3b Dross, 2b
Braendle, if Koenig, lb
Tompkins, cf May, cf
H dson, lb Hickey, If
i~ffley, c Rea, c
Daniels, 2b Sauski, rf
Eastman, rf Veller, p
Kracht, ss Thomas, 3b
Kieger, p Haussman, ss
Michigan's baseball team will
lose its Conference -season today
with. a game against Indiana on
'erry field at 4:05 o'clock. Gus
Ciegler will be Fisher's choice to
tsume the mound duties against
he ;veteran "Lefty" Veller of the
Io.oliers. .
Today's contest will mark the fin-
I appearance of Veller, one of the
reatest southpaw hurlers in the
Sig Ten, in collegiate baseball. Gus
Cieger will also be twirling his last
1onerence game for the Wolver-
nes.
Wolves Win First Game.
The Maize and Blue nine scored
win over the Hoosiers earlier in
he year but errors paved the way
or the Wolverine conquest. Veller,
a this engagement, pitched a re-
;larkable game sending eleven menl
long the strike-out route, but.his
eanumates booted in three of the
olverine's four runs..
O0a Monday the Hoosiers went
oWI to defeat before the on-
laught of the Michigan State Spar-
ans, 10 to 9 in an eleven inning
ame at East Lansing. Indiana
.secd three pitchers in the contest.
reller hurled the first three innings
rithout, permitting a hit, but he
ras relieved to save him for the
l14h with the Wolverines today.
betty and Bailey who followed him
in the mound did not fair so well.
'he Spartans have also taken .the
neasure df the Michigan nine in
he one game played this spring.
Port-Siders Are Jinx.
'Left-handed pitching has been a
enace to the Wolverine batters;
11 season and in an endeavor to
rekk this jinx Coach Ray Fisher
as been sending his hitters to the
late to look over the offerings of
44
Fom
Calirornia
to New Haven
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EDG EWORTH
SMOKING TOBACCO
Wesley Fesler Gets
Pro Baseball Urge;
Signs With Redbirds
COLUMBUS, o., June 2. -(,P)-
Wesley Fesler will join the ranks of
professional baseball aftter he grad-
uates from Ohio State university.
The all-American football end and
all-Western conference basketball
star signed a contract with the Co-
lumbus American association club
yesterday and will report to the
team when it returns from a road
trip Monday.
Larry MacPhail, who announced
the signing of the contract, declined
to divuilge the salary but said the
agreement called for a one-year
tryout for Fesler with the stipula-
tion that he would not be farmed
out to another club of lower classi-
fication than the American associa-
tion.
his port-siders, McKay and Tra-
verse. The Wolverines have needed
all the opportunities they can get
against southpaw hurling, as the
Indiana ace will be out to seek re-
venge for the earlier defeat, and he
can be counted on to give an ex--
cellent exhibition in his final per-
formance in college diamond cir-
cles.
Kiegler Comes Through.
Kiegler, the Michigan mound1
choice, has been a member of the
Wolverine staff for the past three
years, but not until this season has
he come through with any twirling
of Conference calibre. In the games
he has pitched this spring, he has
turned in some remarkeble perfor-
mances against Big Ten and other
college teams.
With today's game Michigan vll'
put away the glove and stick for a
week and a half, at the end of
which time the men will Mart pre-
parations fgr the two final contests
of the year against Michigan State
during Commencement week.
hOME RUNS
Berry, Red Sox; Dickey, Yanks;
Miller, Athletics; Johnson, Tig-
ers; and Klein (2), Phillies.
TO WN CLREW IACE
Cornell, Washington Also Rated
in Poughkeepsie Meet
on June 16. I
By John Thomas
Judging on the basis of perform-
ances during the short racing sea-
son, the Varsity crews of Columbia,
Cornell, and Washington probably
will be the favorites when Pough-
keepsie sees the annual Intercolle-
giate Crew races June 16.
Winning four successive prelim-
inary races, Columbia hris the most
impressive record. Cornell, by beat-
ing Yale, demonstrated sueh power
that experts rate it close to the
'ions. Washington has not raced
since April, when ,it conquered Cal-
ifornia, but the current Hoskies are
regarded in the West as the equal
of some of the great eights which
have come to Pouglhkeepsie from
Seattle in the last decade.
Two Other Contenders.
Syracuse and California are the
only other crews in the field which
so far this season have a chance
of winning, according to the critics.
Old Jim Ten Eyck's material is far
better than usual and he is likely
to produce something potent by;
combining his two varsity eights.
Syracuse defeated the Navy in its
only preliminary race.
California was a close second tol
Washington in the Annual Spring-
time race on the Pacific coast. Un-
til the experts view this crew upon
the scene of battle, the Golden
Bear's rating will .emain about the
same.
Navy Looks Slow.
Massachusetts Tech has been de-
feated three times and the Navy
twice in pre-season starts. Both of
these crews will be improved by the
middle of June but it is doubtful
if theirchances will be bright for
a victory then. Peninsylvania f in-
ished last in two triangular meets
and nosed out Princeton for a sec-
ond in the third, the Childs Cup
event last Saturday, which Colum-
bia won without undue strain.
BOX SCORE
BIG LIEAGUE STANDINGS
American League
Phia l hiaon.......
New York.........
Cleveland........
Chicao..........
Dutroit
St. Lor,.....,....
Boston.............
National Le"
St. Louis ..........
New York .......
Chicago.........
Boston ............
Brooklyn........
Philadelphia.......
Pittsburgh.........
Cincinnati.........
w
29
25
23
21
17
18
13
14
L
10
16
10
20
22
27
23
26
L
11
14
16
19
20
20
22
32
Pet.
.743
.610
.590
.512
.436
.400
.361
.350
Pet.
.694
.622
.568
.500
.500
.487
.425
.220
FRATERNITY TITL
Beat Alpha Kappa Lambda 7-0
by Blow-up in Ninth to Win
43 Straight Games.
Phi Sigma Delta won another
baseball title in this year's inter-
fraternity tournament sponsored by
the Intramural Department when
_ hey defeated Alpoha FK.appa Lamb-
P
ague
w
25
23
21
19
20
19
18
9
TIGERS LOSE TO
WASHINGTON, 4-3
Indians Wmin Eighth Consecutive
Game; Near Third Place.
Washington took the flirst game
of a series with the Tigers, 4 to 3.
Grabowski filled the catcher's posi-
tion, for the first time this season,
on the Detroit team. Whitehill gave
Washington 12 hits while Spencer
allowed 11.
The Cleveland Indians, strivingl
nobly to re in the position they
held before thoir sudIden deflation,
won thet eighth successive game,
and the ninth out of eleven. A re-
versal Oi form as remarkable as
that whi h carried them six or'
seven places down in the standings
a few weeks ago has now brought
them to within three games of the
third-place Yankees.
The two league-leaders, the Ath-
letics anl Cardinals, continued to
justify their positions by taking a,
game apiece from the White Sox
and Giants.
da yesterday, 7-0. The game wasI
finely played by both teams and
there was a large crowd assembled
to watch the contest.
The Phi Sigs worked their way
slowly into a fair lead by raking
in one run in each of the third,
sixth, and eighth innings, but the I
scoring that won the game for them
game in the ninth when Simon fin-I
ally blew up and the A.K.L.'s con-
tributed three errors to defeat
themselves.
Error Forces Runs.
In the fatal inning Sheris and
Finkle started off with a single
apiece, then Heffer got on base
when the catcher, Clark, dropped
the third strike. An error by Beck-
er allowed Schonberg to force in
a couple runs and then Lewman
went down, Oldham to Becker.
Weiss forced a run by Spencer's
error, then Edgert flied out, an-
other tally coming on the throw in,
and Wein ended the rally by fan-
ning. Up to this point the game
had been practically air-tight and
the runner-up seemed to have a
chance to slug their way out to a
win.
This gives Phi Sigma Delta 43
straight wins and 150 points while
Alpha Kappa Lambda will receive
134 for their share. The Intram-
(Continued on Page 7)
Star 440 Man to Lead Outdoor
and Indoor Teams; Lewis
to Manage Thinclads.
1dwin F. Russell, 32E, star mid-
d~e istance runner. will captain
the Michigan Varsity track team
durin its 1932
campaign for Big
-y'n h1oios on both
ndoor and outdoor
track, it was an-
nounced yesterday
siter his election
oy the track letter
Russell, who hails
from Rochester, N.
Y., is one of the
best 440 men ever
Russell to run for this in-5
stitution. His spectacular perform-
ance in winning this event agains
odds at the last Big Ten mee
stamped him as- one of the out
standing men in the Conference.
Besides winning laurels in h
individual event, he has been an
chor man on the championshi
mile relay team which set a ne
Big Ten record on the outdoor trac
as well as a new Yost field hous
record on the indoor and coppe
the indoor Conference relay even
Will Have Stropg Team.
Consistently good performane
have brought Russell this hig
honor and upon him will fall a
the glory of defending the indoo
track crown as well as making
bid for the outdoor title with oi
of the strongest teams which Mich
igan has boasted in some time.
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Phi Sigma Delta
Schonberg, ss .......
Lewhian, cf.......
Weiss, p............
Edgert, 3b........
Wein, 2b.........
AB
5
5
5
5
5
H
0
2
3
1
R
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1
1
0
0
E
0
0
0
0
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(Continued on Page 7)
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